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ILLINOIS  STATE  NORMAL  UNIVERSITY 


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NORMAL,      ILLINOIS 


CARL   J.    BELL    EDITOR 


COPYRIGHT 


19       4       8 


VOLUME    58 


IN  MEMORY  OF... 


J0      *    >K 


Died  January   15,   1948  .  .  . 

A  thorough,  exacting  scholar  .  .  . 

Devoted    free    time    to    careful,    thoughtful    conferences 
with   his  students  .  .  . 


Dr.   E.  H.   Peterson 


George  A.  Grine 

Husband  and  wife  .  .  .  students  at  ISNU  .  .  .  Mr.  Grine, 
a  junior  in  Industrial  Arts,  Mrs.  Grine,  a  junior  in  Home 
Economics. 

Both  served  their  country  in  World  War  II. 


Josie  May  Grine 

George  was  born  at  St.  Louis,  Missouri,  in  1921,  and 
Josie  at  Nevada,  Missouri,  in   1919. 

On  December  31,  1947,  both  were  killed  in  an  auto- 
mobile accident  near  Tuscola,  Illinois. 


WE  DEDICATE... 


To  Mr.  Wayne  F.  Sherrard  and  his  splendid  Men's 
Redbird  and  All-Girl  Marching  Bands,  we  sincerely  dedi- 
cate the  1948  Index. 

To  Mr.  Sherrard  and  the  190  members  of  the  band, 
who  spent  long  hours  of  practice  to  achieve  perfection, 
we  are  greatly  indebted  for  the  colorful  performances 
displayed  at  football  games  here  and  at  other  college 
campuses.  The  combined   bands   predominated   over  the 


festivities  at  the  Eureka  Pumpkin  Festival,  and  at  the 
request  of  Governor  Green,  the  Men's  Marching  Band 
appeared  at  the  National  Aviation  Clinic  Luncheon, 
Springfield,   Illinois. 

We  of  ISNU  may  be  justly  proud  of  Mr.  Sherrard  and 
the  Marching  Bands  for  the  recognition  they  have 
brought  to  our  school. 


OLD    MAIN 


OLD    MAIN 


8 


SCIENCE 


M  ETC ALF 


N  D.    ARTS 


FELL    HALL 


SMITH    HALL 


OLD    MAIN 


10 


NORTH    HALL 


MILNER    LIBRARY 


TENNIS    COURT 


1 1 


COOK    HALL 


FARM    GATES 


12 


McCORMICK 
GYM 


. 


HEATING    PLANT 


CARDINAL 
COURT 


13 


CONTENTS: 


ADMINISTRATION 


UNIVERSITY 


STUDENTS 


ACTIVITIES 


FOREWORD: 


In  later  years,  if  you  should  ask  a  former  classmate 
the  question,  "What  period  of  your  life  would  you 
choose  to  live  over  again?",  you  might  receive  this 
answer:  "I  would  choose  to  re-live  those  days  I  spent 
in  college." 

Of  course  it  would  be  impossible  to  go  back  to  our 
college  days,  but  we  may  all  reminisce  over  that  never- 
to-be-forgotten   period  of  our  lives.  What  I   should   like 


to  say  is  that  I  believe  a  college  annual  will  be  read 
and  re-read  in  later  years  more  than  when  it  is  new. 
Although  I  do  not  consider  the  1948  Index  entirely 
traditional  in  content,  I  also  do  not  consider  it  to  be 
radical  in  any  respect.  As  closely  as  possible  a  middle- 
of-the-road  policy  has  been  observed.  The  1948  Index 
is  presented  to  you  of  ISNU  with  the  hope  that  you  will 
enjoy   it  for  many  years  to  come. 

CARL  J.  BELL, 
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF 


14 


ADMINISTRAT      ION 


"I  wish  I  could  live  again  my  college  years,"  said  a 
senior  regretfully  not  long  ago.  Unfortunately  this  is 
the  oft-repeated  confession  of  numerous  college  stu- 
dents, all  too  late.  These  regrets  are  that  so  many 
opportunities  for  the  enrichment  of  life  were  missed  in 
not  getting  the  most  from  both  studies  and  student 
activities  while  in  college. 

The  relatively  few  years  in  college  influence  greatly 


the  many  following  years.  The  thrill  of  scholastic  ac- 
complishment, the  feeling  of  being  qualified  to  earn 
a  living  in  a  chosen  field  and  of  contributing  to  the 
betterment  of  mankind  —  these,  and  even  the  romances 
of  college  days  that  often  culminate  in  happy  married 
life,  are  but  a  part  of  those  interesting  years  lived  by 
so    many    students    at    Illinois    State    Normal    University. 


CA>  6J.  (£^~£k 


5 


16 


ADMINISTRATIVE      COUNCIL.     Carrington;    Linkins;    Keaton;     Larson;     Brenneman;    President    Fairchild;    DeYoung;    Holmes; 
Goodier;    Grieder;    Allison;    and    Wade. 


TEACHER     COLLEGE      BOARD.      President    Fairchild;    Lewis    M.    Walker;    Russel    L.    Guin;    Richard    F.    Dunn;    and    Frank   G. 
Thompson,    Board    Chairman. 


17 


Leslie  A.  Holmes 
Administrative  Assistant  to  the  President 


Arthur  H.  Larsen,  Assistant  Dean 
Chris  A.  DeYoung,  Dean 


Elsie  Brenneman 
Registrar 


■W  M       BMW          mmm 

1 

■ 

Ralph  H.  Lin  kins 
Dean  of  Men 


Anna  L.  Keaton 
Dean  of  Women 


18 


U       N       I 


V 


E       R 


I 


D 

P 
R  E  P  fl  RT  Rl  E 
R 
T 
Rl 
E 
R 
T 


R  T  S 


20 


Av^Klv^ULI  Ul\t.     De  Wees;   Orville   L.   Young;   Laubaugh;  Douglass.    Sealed:  Green  and  Hudelson. 


/\  K  I  .      Becker;    Allen;    Barford;    Ogle;    Hoover.     Seafed:    Parker. 


21 


BIOLOGY. 


Aldworth;    Martens;    Gray;    Miller;    Harding;    Lamkey;    Royce;    McAvoy;    Young;    Randel;    Ries;    Moore. 


BUSINESS      EDUCATION.     First  Row:  Toll;  Webb;  Jessa;  Peters.    Second  Row:  McEwen;  Koepke;  Day;  Admire;  Wheeler. 


22 


EDUCATION      AND      PSYCHOLOGY.     First    Row:    Force;    Parker;    Cooper;    Catey;    Buehler;    Henderson.     Second 
Row:    Grieder;   Carrington;    Houston;    Schroeder;   Marzolf;    Lancaster.     Standing:    Lueck;    Paulson;    Lovelass;    Lichty ;    Tiedeman;    Dillinger;    Lar- 


son;   DeWees;   Cole;   Goodier. 


t  IN  V^LI  Oil .     First    Row:    Hiett;    Hoyman;    Williams;    Brigham.     Second    Row:    Stroud;    Fielding;    Holmes;    Huggins;    Klauser.    Third    Row: 
Teager;    Pricer;    Cretcher;  Winegarner;    DeClark;    Vetter;   Okerlund;   Nelson;    Henline. 


23 


FOREIGN  LANGUAGE.    conne„; 


Johnson;    Geweke;   Whitten;    Ellis. 


GEOGRAPHY.     Crompton;     Blackburn; 


McDavitt;     Lathrop;    Barton;    Holmes. 


24 


MEN'S     HEALTH     AND     PHYSICAL     EDUCATION.     Hor.on;  farn'.w.rth;  O'Connor,  GilleH;  Struck;  Hi 


Second    Row:    Hancock;    Cogdal;    Frye;    Foy;    Goff. 


WOMEN'S     HEALTH     AND     PHYSICAL     EDUCATION.       S.al.er,    Frey,   Smith.     Standing:    Hoffman; 
Cooper;    Gray;    French;    Cernich. 


25 


HOME      ECONOMICS.      Conkey;     Ross;    Warren;    Bu 


ell;    Johnson;    Dirks. 


INDUSTRIAL     ARTS.     Stombaugh;    Honn,    Ashbrook,    Hammerlund;    Re 


26 


LIBrxAlxT.      Speer;    Flotnicky;    Guthrie;    Glem;    Lawrence;    Kelly;    Welch;    Pohle;    Dooley;    Crosby;    and    Deckc 


MATHEMATICS. 


Mills;    Flagg;    Ullsvik;    McCormick;    and    Bey. 


27 


IVIUol\_x.      S2ated:    Knudson;    Hardine;    Luther;    Westhoflf;    Tipton.     Standing:    Glenn;    Isted; 


Boicourt;    Peithman;    Sherrard. 


PHYSICAL      SCIfcNOt.     First    Row:    Gooding;    Griffith;    Cross;    Smith.     Second    Row:    Harper;    Dalluge;    Evans;    Ivens. 


28 


SOCIAL  SCIENCE.  Waldron;  Tasher;  Eikenberry;  Alexander;  Brunk.  Second 
Row:  Glasener,-  Kinnemart;  Cavanagh;  Marshall;  Ebel.  Third  Row:  Pearcy;  Allison;  Browne; 
Hess;   Wade;    Harper;    Moore. 


jrttUn.     Holmes;  Allen;  Nelson;  Barber;  Van  Den   Heurk;  Eckleman;  Parret   and    Yates. 


29 


SPECIAL  EDUCATION 


Dr.   Rose   E.   Parker 
Director  of  the  Division  of  Special  Education 


The  constitution  of  the  State  of  Illinois  guarantees  to 
all  children  a  good  education  —  this  includes  those 
physically,    mentally    and    socially   atypical. 

Dr.  Parker  is  director  of  the  Division  of  Special  Edu- 
cation which  trains  students  to  become  teachers  of  these 
exceptional  children. 


30 


LRBORRTORy      SCHOOL 

m  E  T  C  fl  L  F 

I  $  $  c  $ 

t  r  i  n  i  t  y 


31 


METCALF 


PRINCIPAL     AND      ADMINISTRATION.     Hari;    Pulaski;    Smith,    Principal    Houston;    Schlosser,    Mr.    Lovelass. 


FINE      AND      PRACTICAL     ARTS.     Webb;   Warren;   B.    Johnson;   M.    Parker;   AAcEwen;   Jessa.     Standing:   Glenn;   Kuntz; 


Peithman;    Richards;    Hammerlund;    Ashbrook;    Honn;   and    Reed. 


32 


BBKSUBbESSZ 

—  - - — /***? 


0EO0RAPHY      AND      SOCIAL      STUDIES.         Alexander,    Barton,   McDavilt,    Eikenberry,   and    teppert. 


SCIENCE  AND  MATHEMATICS,  d 

Farnsworth    and    Ullsvik. 


ouglas,    Smith,    McAvoy,    Harper,    Flagg,    McCormick,    Bey.     Standing:    Green,    Moore, 


33 


SPEECH      AND      LAN0UA0E.     Barber;   Stroud;   Geweke;    Hoyman;   Whitten;   Connell;   DeClark;   Ellis;   Klauser;   Huggins; 
and    Vetter. 


HEALTH      AND      PHYSICAL      EDUCATION.      Farnsworth;    O'Connor;    Shea;    and    Gray. 


34 


hrM  t  I  V^>ALr"     O  I  Al~r~.     Lichty;    Clemans;    Mansfield;    Masten;    White;    Hauge;    Zimmerman.     Second   Row:   Thoene;   Stein;   Glenn; 
Gillett;    Jenne;    Hitchcock;    Grossart;    Hayden;    Cole;    Arnold;    Dean    and   Tipton. 


ISSCS    Staff 


Miss  Harriet  R.  Wheeler 

Critic  for  Business  Teachers 

Trinity  High  School 


35 


BOARDS  £ 


COmmiTTEES 


36 


Truckenbrod;    Martin;    Reiser;    Alverson;    Boussom;    unidentified.     Standing:    Wade;     Ivens;    White;    French;    Stried;    Augustus;    Surratt;    Krug; 
Francis;    Faellaci;    Buss. 


STUDENT  COUNCIL 


The  Wesleyan-Normal  Inter-University  Council  was 
formed  this  year  in  hope  to  sponsor  activities  during 
the  year  for  both  schools  and  to  develop  better  relations 
between  the  schools. 

As  a  Council,  they  are  in  charge  of  the  Student 
Lounge  and  the  Smoker.  Plans  for  Homecoming  and 
the  class  elections  in  the  spring  are  also  duties  of  the 
Student  Council. 


At  their  meeting  every  two  weeks,  the  members  give 
reports  of  various  board  meetings  that  have  been  held. 
Each  member  of  the  Council  is  also  a  member  of  one 
of  the  student-faculty  boards  and  as  such  acts  as  a 
connection   between  the  two. 

Officers  of  the  Student  Council  are  Martha  Alverson, 
president;  Joyce  Boussum,  vice-president;  Norma  Reeser, 
secretary-treasurer;   Mr.   Howard    Ivens,   sponsor. 


37 


SOCIAL     AFFAIRS.    Evans;   Johnson,    B.;   Frey,   B.;   Eckelmann. 


THEATER.      Norton,  H 


,   Hope;   Larson;  Craig;   Alverson;  Allen. 


38 


l~V»yi\  t  IN  ^  I  \-^«     Eikenberry;  Craig;    Parret;   Borg;   Rammel. 


APPORTIONMENT.      Ward;    Cross,    B.;    Faellaci;    Wolfe;    Young.     Lasi    Row:    Marshall;    Knudson;    President    Fairchild;    Green 
and  Toll. 


39 


/\  I  I" ILt  I  I  Vs.    Paulson;   Frink;   Riley;   French;  Wade.    Second  Row:   Hancock,   Laubaugh;   Ivens;  unidentified;  French,  Joe;  Francis. 


II  \— '  IVI  t  O  \-s  (VI I  IN  \37 .     French,   Joe;   Young;   Alverson;    Friese;  DeWees.     Second    Row:    Hancock;    Paoli;    Geiger;    Brust;    Frey;    Buss. 
Third  Row:   Tasher;    Laubaugh;   Reed;  Day. 


40 


RELIGIOUS      LIFE.      Hiett;    McDavitt;   Shreve;   Jones,   Wanda;    Peters;   Co'e. 


itALI  fl.     Fitzgerald;    Dirks;    Keaton;    Aldworth.     Second    Row:    Linkins;   Horton;  French;   Lamkey;  Shay. 


41 


ENTERTAINMENT  ASSEMBLY.      Hoover;    Kinneman;    Alexander;    Surratt;    Krug;    Wafkins.     Second    Row:    Allen; 


Cross,    C;    Dossen;    Henken;    Cross,    K.;    Henline;    Peithman. 


Highlight    of    the    entertainment    season    was    the   appearance   of   the   Cincinnati    Symphony    Orchestra. 


42 


STUDENTS 


Holloway;    Besse;    Garrison;    Dr.    Carrington;    Meyer;    Ouigley;    Thompson 


GRADUATE  SCHOOL 


The  graduate  school  has  been  growing  steadily  in 
enrollment  and  courses  offered  since  work  on  the  grad- 
uate level   was  first  given  during  the   1944  intersession. 

The  ISNU  Graduate  School  didn't  come  to  life  from 
a  dream;  its  present  organization  is  the  realization  of 
a  felt  need  for  work  on  a  higher  level  in  teacher  educa- 
tion   in   Central    Illinois. 

In  these  three  years  many  of  the  departments  on 
campus  have  instituted  graduate  work.  Those  depart- 
ments offering  work  on  the  graduate  level  are  Bio- 
logical Science,  Education  and  Psychology,  English, 
Geography,  Health  and  Physical  Education  (women), 
Mathematics,    Physical    Science,    and    Social   Science. 


The  present  year  showed  as  an  enrollment  figure 
thirty  full-time  students  and  thirty-eight  part-time  stu- 
dents. 

Instruction  in  the  Graduate  School  is  planned  upon 
an  interchange  of  ideas  and  the  bringing  of  questions 
by  the  class  members.  Faculty  members  teaching  grad- 
uate courses  urge  the  departure  from  ordinary  class- 
room procedure  toward  a  situation  of  a  more  informal 
nature. 

The  student  is  allowed  five  years  from  the  date  of 
matriculation  to  complete  work  for  the  master's  degree 
requirements. 

The  school  has  granted  twenty-nine  master's  degrees. 


44 


Oliver    Buck 
Delores   McMillin 


Zola    Harvey 
William    K.    Posorske 


Esther    Hileman  Robert   Howell 

Evelyn   Stalter  Marilyn    Thomas 


Carrelling! 


45 


Volkert;    Brown;     Friese 


SENIORS 


"Parting  is  such  sweet  sorrow  that  I  could  say  good- 
bye till  it  be  'morrow  — "  That's  enough  from  Willie's 
sentiments   for  we  should   leave  non-plussed. 

We're  post-war  products  of  inflation,  post-Kantianism, 
and  hamburgeritus.  A  truer  word  was  never  pictured. 
This  "New  Look"  belongs  to  the  sheepskin  holders  of 
'48  —  we're  accredited  teachers! 

The  mass  of  this  class,  Freshmaned  in  1944  with  a 
following  guide  in  Doc  Brown.  Other  seniors  among  us 
began  around  the  turn  of  depression.  No  scholastic 
excuse  for  they  were  marking  time. 

Selecting  and  electing  from  the  largest  running  in 
any  previous  year,  Art  Friese  became  Prexy  with  ballots 


to  spare.  Second  in  command  was  Howard  Brown, 
Secretary-treasurer  —  Bob  Volkert. 

Need  advice?  Appoint  an  advisory  board.  The  senior 
class  had  one.  Maybe  these  people  can  help  us  again. 
List:  Marge  Hodel,  Connie  Goudreau,  Dusty  Wilson, 
Spence  Gilmore,  Leven  Dowdall,  Georgia  Grossart, 
Martha  Lou  Alverson,  Joan  Barry,  Harold  Wilkey,  Cal 
Teel,  and  George  Hrehovcsik. 

Their  work  produced  a  closed  party  at  the  lake  in 
November.  An  all  school  dance,  December  6,  1947. 
Senior  skip  day  in  the  spring  and  that  assembly.  What 
a  Take-Off! 


46 


Adams,   Trenouth 

Agriculture 

Emden 


Ahlrich,  Ray 
Business  Ed. 
Cerro   Gordo 


Alverson,   Martha    Lou 

Elem. 

Bloomington 


Anderson,    Eddie 

Anderson,  Lydia 

Anthony,  Betty  Jane 

Art 

Art 

Bus.   Ed. 

Elgin 

Galesburg 

Roodhouse 

Ashcraft,    LaVerne 

Atkinson,    Phillip 

Bailey,  Claude 

Baker,    Blanche 

Baker,    James 

Barnhart,    James 

P.E. 

Bus.    Ed. 

H.  &  P.  E. 

Elem. 

Music 

H.  &  P.   E. 

Bangs,  Texas 

Cambridge 

Chatsworth 

Dana 

Dana 

Streator 

Barry,    Joan 

Barz,    Myra 

Bates,   Virginia 

H.  &   P.    E. 

Latin 

Home   Ec. 

Kewanee 

Roberts 

Neponset 

Battiste,    John 

Beattie,    Dora 

Belcaster,    Beverly 

Agriculture 

Bus.    Ed. 

Elem. 

Witt 

Rosamond 

Chicago 

47 


Bell,  Carl 

Bell,   Evelyn 

Bell,   James 

Bus.    Ed. 

Geography 

Soc.  Sci. 

Batchtown 

Normal 

Danville 

Bennett,    Charlotte 

Bevan,  Charlotte 

Bishop,    Barbara 

Music 

Bus.    Ed. 

Math. 

Canton 

St.    Petersburg,   Fla. 

Rantoul 

Blake,    Betty 

Blake,   Juanita 

Brais,   Joyce 

Bratton,    Zella 

Brauer,    Erwin 

Broderick,   Charlotte 

Home    Ec. 

Bus.    Ed. 

Bus.    Ed. 

English 

Ind.   Arts 

English 

Pontiac 

Morris 

Kankakee 

Knoxville 

Saint    Peter 

Tovey 

Brown,  Howard 

Brown,    Orville 

Brown,    Ruth 

H.    &    P.    E. 

Ind.    Arts 

Bus.    Ed. 

Springfield 

Yuba    City,   Calif. 

Stonington 

Burkey,  George 

Burkhart,   Betty 

Cairns,  Dorothy 

Bus.    Ed. 

Bus.    Ed. 

H.  &  P.   E. 

Bloomington 

Dallas    City 

Alton 

48 


Campbell,    John 

Carter,    Clarence 

Carter,  J.   Don 

Commerce 

English 

Soc.   Sci. 

Lexington 

Laura 

Bloomington 

Chase,  Barbara 

Clark,   E.   Arlene 

Clark,    Raymond 

Home   Ec. 

Home   Ec. 

H.  &   P.   E. 

Laura 

Decatur 

East  Alton 

Code,    Mary 

Cooper,    Harry 

Coople,    Lucille 

Coftrell,   Gordon 

Craig,   Warren 

Cross,    Betty 

Home   Ec. 

Soc.    Sci. 

English 

Geography 

Speech 

Soc.   Sci. 

Bradford 

Waterford,  Okla. 

Centralia 

Mechanicsburg 

Fairbury 

Normal 

Cross,   K.   Patricia 

Crowell,    Lois 

Cusac,   Dorothy 

Math. 

Soc.   Sci. 

Bus.    Ed. 

Normal 

Chicago 

Rutland 

D'Agostino,   Frank 

Daniel,   Edward 

Davis,   Rosemary 

H.   &    P.   E. 

Music 

H.    &    P.    E. 

Chicago 

Jacksonville 

Emington 

49 


Dawson,    Nita 

Dean,    Marian 

Diener,  Richard 

Bus.    Ed. 

Soc.    Sci. 

English 

Lovington 

Hammond,   Ind. 

Chicago 

Dillon,  Georgia 

Dorsey,   Richard 

Douglass,    Barbara 

Elem. 

H.  &  P.    E. 

Home   Ec. 

Hinsdale 

Elgin 

Le    Roy 

'     MhSESh 


Dowdall,     Leven 

Drosle,    Betty 

Ecklund,   Roberta 

Edwards,    George 

Edwards,    Mary    Etta 

Einert,   William 

Ind.    Arts 

Biology 

Elem. 

Soc.   Sci. 

English 

Phys.   Sci. 

Carrollton 

Chebanse 

La  Moille 

Ashland 

Laura 

Bureau 

Ekin,  Floy 

Eveland,    Betty 

Ferris,    Harry 

Soc.    Sci. 

English 

Math. 

East    Moline 

Piper  City 

Fairview 

Fields,    Kathleen 

Fox,    John 

Frink,  Melba 

Bus.    Ed. 

Spec.   Ed. 

Biology 

Antioch 

Edwardsville 

Normal 

50 


Fry,    Mildred 

Galloway,    Duncan 

Garner,    Raegene 

Art 

Ind.   Arts 

Music 

Bloomington 

Alton 

Leaf   River 

Garner,   Violet 

Garner,    William 

Gee,    Lorainne 

English 

Soc.   Sci. 

Bus.    Ed. 

Rossville 

Rossville 

Bloomington 

Gemeny,  Blaine 

Gentes,    Elmo 

George,   John 

Gerfen,  Raymond 

Geske,    Bob 

Giacobassi,   Tilio 

Bus.    Ed. 

Business 

Music 

Ind.  Arts 

Bus.    Ed. 

Geography 

Bloomington 

Chenoa 

Sullivan 

Belleville 

Downs 

Kincaid 

Jillis,    Dorothy 

Gilmore,    Spencer 

Goetz,    Marjorie 

Elem. 

Geography 

Geography 

Bloomington 

Saybrook 

Metamora 

Goudreau,  Constance 

Elem. 

Kankakee 


Green,    Roberta 

Home    Ec. 

Bloomington 


Greening,     Vernon 
Bus.    Ed. 
La  Salle 


51 


Grossart,    Georgia 

Guither,    Irene 

Hagerman,    Harry 

Elem. 

Home   Ec. 

H.  &  P.   E. 

Belleville 

Walnut 

Indianola 

Hall,    Betty 

Hargis,    Virgil 

Harjes,    Glenn 

Elem. 

Soc.    Sci. 

H.  &  P.   E. 

Chicago 

Bloomington 

Mendota 

Hauge,   Charlotte 

Healy,    AAarian 

Hegner,    Richard 

Helton,    Erma 

Hemken,    Joan 

Henry,   Alice 

Elem. 

Home    Ec. 

Ind.   Arts 

Home    Ec. 

Bus.    Ed. 

Elem. 

Newark 

Kankakee 

Fox    River    Grove 

Ogden 

Chenoa 

Springfield 

Herget,    Mary 

Herzog,   Sylvia 

Hewitt,   Russell 

Home    Ec. 

Spec.    Ed. 

Ind.   Arts 

Pekin 

Chicago 

Danville 

Hodel,  Marjorie 

Hrehovcsik,    George 

Hubbell,  Lorena 

Music 

H.  &   P.   E. 

Elem. 

Metamora 

Whiting,    Ind. 

Elmwood 

52 


Hull,    Robert 

Jackson,    Gerald 

Music 

Ind.  Arts 

Bloomington 

Girard 

Jenne,  Jane 

Elem. 

Carlyle 


Johnston,    Marvin 

Jones,   Barbara 

Jorstad,    John 

H.  &   P.   E. 

Home    Ec. 

H.  &   P.   E. 

Piper  City 

Centralia 

Newark 

Junis,    Adelaide 

Jury,    Dorothy 

Kaiser,    Henry 

Kapraun,    Margaret 

Keefe,   Wm. 

Kerz,    Betty 

Bus.    Ed. 

Home   Ec. 

H.  &  P.   E. 

Math. 

Soc.    Sci. 

Spanish 

Neponset 

Minonk 

Greenview 

Benson 

Normal 

Bloomington 

Kiiskila,   Roy 

Kime,    Earl 

King,    Voris 

Bus.    Ed. 

Bus.    Ed. 

Geography 

National    Mine,    Mich. 

Dwight 

Washington,     D.C 

Kirchner,    Alan 

Kirkpatrick,   Mildred 

Kisellus,     Leonard 

Music 

Home    Ec. 

Phys.    Ed. 

Havana 

Bloomington 

Braceville 

53 


itchell,   Madelynne 

Komlanc,    Anthony 

Kruse,    Marian 

Home    Ec. 

H.   &   P.   E. 

Home    Ec. 

Pekin 

Normal 

Herscher 

Kuhn,   Pat 

Lagneaux,    Charles 

Laitas,   Walter 

English 

H.  &  P.   E. 

H.  &   P.    E. 

Clinton 

Lafayette,    La. 

Westville 

Larson,    Eleanore 

L'Heureux,    Robert 

Lockenvitz,    Phyllis 

Lucero,   Paloma 

Lundberg,    Elaine 

Luster,   Mildred 

Speech 

Music 

Bus.    Ed. 

Bus.  Ed. 

English 

Bus.    Ed. 

Earl  vi  1  It- 

Wood    River 

Bloomington 

Green    Valley 

McNabb 

Springfield 

McDaniels,    Elizabeth 

McNeil,   Janice 

McNeil,    John 

English 

Home    Ec. 

Soc.    Sci. 

Alton 

Bloomington 

Gray,     Kentucky 

McVickar,    Edward 

Maddrey,    George 

Mallory,   Virginia 

Agriculture 

H.  &  P.   E. 

Bus.    Ed. 

Sumner 

Raleigh,  N.   C. 

Villa   Park,   III. 

54 


Morgan,   James 

Bus.    Ed. 

Bloomington 


Martin,    Julia 

Soc.    Sci. 
Bloomington 


Masten,    Kathryn 
Elem. 
Tallula 


Miller,    Eleanor 

Miller,    Shirley 

Mills,    Marna 

Elem. 

Bus.    Ed. 

Home    Ec. 

Dewitt 

Magnolia 

Long   Point 

Mitchell,    Edward 

Moyer,  William 

Muffley,    Lorraine 

Munson,  Janice 

Naffziger,   Eldon 

Naffziger,    Joseph 

Bus.    Ed. 

H.    &    P.    E. 

Elem. 

Bus.    Ed. 

Bus.   Ed. 

Math. 

Saunemin 

Shelbyville 

Shirley 

Phophetstown 

Bloomington 

Hopedale 

Morini,     William 

Norton,    Hope 

Norton,    Reeve 

Math. 

Elem. 

Phys.    Sci. 

Chicago 

Lockport 

Normal 

Olsen,    Eleanor 

Paine,    Harold 

Paoli,    Charles 

H.  &  P.   E. 

Soc.    Sci. 

Ind.    Arts 

Lincoln 

Tremont 

Collin  sville 

55 


Pehlman,    Verna 

Soc.    Sci. 

Springfield 


Porter,  Charles 
Ind.   Arts 
Normal 


Peterson,    Raymond 
Geography 
Galesburg 


Proctor,    Margaret 

Math. 

Collinsville 


Pirka,    Arnost 
Soc.    Sci. 

Normal 


Racobs,     Donna 

Home    Ec. 

Lincoln 


Reeser,   Norma 

Reinhart,   Mary 

Roberts,   Eileen 

Schultz,    Chester 

Schultz,    Louise 

Schumacher,    Christine 

Elem. 

Elem. 

Spanish 

Ind.    Arts. 

Home    Ec. 

H.  &   P.  E. 

Mendota 

Colfax 

Godfrey 

Clinton,    Iowa 

Weldon 

Yorkville 

Sedlock,    Theophile 

Sevier,     Barbara 

Sharda,    Jean 

Ind.    Arts 

English 

English 

Westville 

Waverly 

Davenport 

Shreve,    Iris 

Simpson,  Jessie 

Smith,    Arthur 

Speech 

English 

Soc.   Sci. 

East   Moline 

Pana 

Rock    Rapids,    Iowa 

56 


Smith,   Charles 

Smith,    Evelyn 

Smith,    Lyman 

P.  E. 

H.  &  P.  E. 

Math. 

Crawfordsville 

Normal 

Gilman 

Spencer,    Tremaine 

Art 

Bridgeport 


Stoker,    James 
Bus.    Ed. 
Normal 


Stephenson,    Betty 

Bus.    Ed. 

Bloomington 


Stevens,   Pat 

Streid,   Juanita 

Stueber,    Mildred 

Sutton,    Marjorie 

Taylor,    Betty 

Teel,   Cal 

Bus.    Ed. 

Phys.    Sci. 

Music 

Home    Ec. 

English 

Ind.    Arts 

Bloomington 

Chenoa 

Highland 

Milan,    Ind. 

Alton 

Sidney 

Teer,   Vi/ian 

Thomassen,    Connie 

Tinette,    Doris 

Bus.    Ed. 

English 

Speech 

E.    St.  Louis 

Bloomington 

Mt.  Olive 

Truckenbrod,   Joyce 

Tyler,   Ray 

Uhrenholdt,    Barbara 

Art 

Phys.   Sci. 

Phys.    Sci. 

Mendota 

Braceville 

Morris 

57 


Underkoffler,  Milton 

Volesano,   James 

Van    Scoyoc,    Richard 

Phys.    Sci. 

Speech 

Ind.    Arfs 

Girard 

Ladd 

Saybrook 

Volkert,    Robert 

Wade,    Betty 

Webber,   Joan 

H.   &   P.   E. 

Math. 

Speech 

Columbia 

Breese 

Chicago 

Wepprecht,    Kenneth 

White,    Lois 

Whitmore,    Edward 

Wilkey,     Harold 

Williams,    Charles 

Williams,    William 

Soc.    Sci. 

Elem. 

Math. 

Ind.    Arts 

Ind.    Arts 

Ind.   Arts 

Herscher 

Newman 

Aurora 

Maroa 

Lincoln 

Bloomington 

Willis,   Maxine 

Wilson,    Delia 

Winget,   Everett 

English 

H.  &  P.   E. 

Ind.    Arts 

Springfield 

Farmersville 

Loraine 

Wise,    Rosemary 

Withers,   Joyce 

Woltzer,   Marilyn 

Bus.    Ed. 

Home   Ec. 

Soc.    Sci. 

Williamsville 

Colfax 

Dana 

58 


Woosley,   Joan 

Elem. 

Decatur 


Yobski,  Jack 
Bus.  Ed. 
Decatur 


Zimmerman,    Edna 
Bus.   Ed. 
Saybrook 


Zobel,    Herbert 

Geography 

Chicago 


Cowles,   Imogene 
Bus.   Ed. 
Clinton 


Cretcher,  James 

Phys.    Sci. 

Normal 


Wilson,   Yvonne    R. 

Home    Ec. 

Pontiac 


Alone 


Late    evening    snow   drifts   past   the    lighted   window 
like  dust  sifting   through   a  morning  sunbeam. 

Gossiping    winds    tuck    their    endless    quilt   of   night 
about  the  shadowed  roofs. 

Icy  diamonds  shaft  momentary  beacons  after  the 
shifting  flakes. 

Barren   trees   branch   their  intricate  lace  patterns 
high  over  the  covered  walk. 

Complaining  limbs  send  soft  sighs  chasing  each  other 
down  the  empty  street. 


And  I  walk  home,  alone. 


—  Edward  A.  Anderson 


59 


Tucci;    McKeehan,    Paoli 


JUNIOR 


The  Junior  class  of  ISNU  got  the  social  events  of 
the  year  off  to  a  successful  start  by  sponsoring  the 
Xochimilco  Shuffle  with  superb  decorations  by  the  Aud- 
rey Brust  committee. 

Junior  athletes  have  had  a  large  share  of  the  lime- 
light this  year.  Merlin  Belle,  Melvin  Kuethe,  Ray  Morelli, 
Dick  Rockenbach,  and  Louis  Baker  helped  make  the 
Thanksgiving  vacation  longer  by  giving  their  all  in  the 
Wesleyan  game.  Stars  of  the  basketball  courts  were 
Joe  Konitzki,  the  Higgins  twins,  Baker,  and  Belle.  An- 
other capable  Junior  in  athletics  was  Bill  Augustus, 
captain  of  the  great  cross-country  team.  In  all  fields 
of  athletics   we   have   seen    the   work   of  Rod   Abbott   in 


leading  the  Red   Bird  cheers. 

Many   juniors   appear   on    the   list   of   honor  students. 

Campus  leaders  in  other  activities  have  been  Joe 
French,  Jack  Dempster,  Jack  Uhrig  and  Chuck  Paoli. 
Eula  Mae  Bess  and  Norma  Hewitt  share  the  "Trio" 
fame. 

Much  advance  planning  and  careful  consideration 
made  the  Junior-Senior  Prom  the  high  spot  in  the  year's 
social   life. 

Capably  leading  this  campus-worthy  class  were 
Charles  Paoli,  president;  Mark  Tucci,  vice-president; 
Charles  McKeehan,  secretary-treasurer;  and  Dr.  Dillin- 
ger,  faculty  sponsor. 


60 


Abbott,  Spec. 

Adams,  Ind.  Arts 
Albers,  Home  Ec. 
Allen,  Eng. 


Armstrong,  Bus.  Ed. 
Bakker,  Phy.  Sci. 
Bangert,  Elem. 
Bates,  Ind.  Arts 


Becker,  Bio.  Sci. 
Beckley,  Home  Ec. 
Bess,  Music 

Bowers,  Soc.  Sci. 


Brattrud,  Bio.  Sci. 

Britton,  Home  Ec. 

Bromaghim,  Elem. 


Bruno,  Bus.  Ed. 

Brust,  Home  Ec. 

Bunderson,  Elem. 


Carey,  Bus.  Ed. 
Carr,  Latin 
Claus,  Agr. 

Condie,  Elem. 


Cook,  Math. 
Corbitt,  Latin 

Corradetti,  Bus.  Ed. 
Craddock,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Crump,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Cullinan,  Eng. 
Dennis,  Eng. 

Dickenson,  Eng. 


61 


Dickey,  Bus.  Ed. 
Dickson,  Bus.  Ed. 
Dismeier,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Donnawell,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Doyle,  Bus.  Ed. 

Drinhaus,  Bus.  Ed. 
Erickson,  Elem. 
Eterno,  Home  Ec. 


Farrar,  Home  Ec. 
Felton,  Elem. 
Fenton,  Eng. 
Fields,  Bio.  Sci. 


Flannery,  Soc.  Sci. 

Foster,  Phys.  Sci. 

Freedlund,  Home  Ec. 


French,  Soc.  Sci. 

Galloway,  Bio.  Sci. 

Gassman,  Home  Ec. 


Gerfen,  Elem. 
Glover,  Bus.  Ed. 
Gresham,  Soc.  Sci. 
Grosh,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Hahn,  Bus.  Ed. 
Hauge,  Ind.  Arts 

Haughey,  Roger,  Spec. 
Haughey,  Willis,  Spec. 


Hayden,  Elem. 
Hewitt,  Music 
Hogle,  Elem. 

Hollister,  Elem. 


62 


Hultgren,  J.,  Eng. 

Hultgren,  R.,  Soc.  Sci. 
Hungerford,  Bio.  Sci. 
Huttenburg,  Eng. 


Jackson,  H.&  P.  E. 
Jacobs,  Home  Ec. 
Janes,  Bus.  Ed. 

Johnson,  G.,  Soc.  Sci. 


Johnson,  R.,  Soc.  Sci. 
Jones,  Elem. 
Judy,  Bus.  Ed. 
Kaluf,  Elem. 


Keller,  H.  &  P.  E. 

Kemnitz,  Phys.  Sci. 

Kempel,  Bus.  Ed. 


Kieser,  Elem. 

Kneer,  H.  &  P.  E. 

Knight,  Soc.  Sci. 


Kolowski,  Elem. 
Krause,  Eng. 

Kremen,  Soc.  Sci. 

Lawrence,  P.,  Home  Ec. 


Lawrence,  W.,  Spec. 
Lawson,  M.,  Eng. 

Lawson,  R.,  Home  Ec. 
Lemon,  Bus.  Ed. 


Lighthall,  Music 
Lockhart,  Bus.  Ed. 
Longnecker,  Eng. 
Lund,  Elem. 


63 


Lyles,  Home  Ec. 
MacCallum,  Elem. 
McDonald,  Agr. 

McGeath,  H.  &  P.  E. 


McGovern,  H.  &  P.  E. 
McKeehan,  Eng. 
Mayes,  Eng. 

Miglio,  Soc.  Sci. 


Miles,  Soc.  Sci. 
Miller,  Elem. 
Monroe,  Elem. 

Morrison,  Home  Ec. 


Murphy,  Speech 

Mutch,  Home  Ec. 

Norton,  Spec. 


Nortrup,  Home  Ec. 

Ogden,  Art 


Paepke,  Soc.  Sci. 


Parker,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Parsons,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Patzer,  Soc.  Sci. 
Paynic,  Phy.  Sci. 


Peaco,  Soc.  Sci. 
Pedrotti,  Phy.  Sci. 
Pefferman,  Bus.  Ed. 
Pemberton,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Pement,  Eng. 
Plese,  Geog. 
Plummer,  Agr. 
Pollock,  Elem. 


64 


Pulaski,  Eng. 

Quimby,  Spec.  Ed. 
Reig,  Bus.  Ed. 
Reynolds,  Elem. 


Rhodus,  Bus.  Ed. 
Ridlen,  Elem. 
Riley,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Rippel,  Bus.  Ed. 


Ritchie,  Home  Ec. 
Rousey,  Eng. 
Rust,  H.&  P.  E. 
Salmon,  Music 


Schneeberg,  Ind.  Arts 

Scholl,  Bus.  Ed. 

Schultz,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Scully,  H.&  P.  E. 

Sexton,  Home  Ec. 

Schenk,  Eng. 


i  ik!,r\<      v. 


Shickle,  Latin 

Shotick,  Spec.  Ed. 
Shall,  Bus.  Ed. 

Slomer,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Small,  Soc.  Sci. 
Smith,  H.,  Elem. 

Smith,  J.,  H.&  P.  E. 

Smith,  Larry,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Smith,  Lois,  H.&  P.  E. 
Sprecker,  Spec.  Ed. 
Steinhagen,  Art 
Stenderup,  Eng. 


65 


Sumner,  Elem. 

Surratt,  H.  &  P.  E. 

Takehara,  Elem. 
Tweet,  Soc.  Sci. 

Verrill,   Elem. 

Ward,  Bus.  Ed. 
Weaver,  D.,  Elem. 

Williams,  Geog. 

Wise,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Testa,  H.  &  P.  E. 

Thompson,  Bus.  Ed. 

Tulle,  Ind.  Arts 
Watke,  Spec. 

Watson,  Home  Ec. 

Weaver,  B.,  Ind.  Arts 
Wolfe,  Math. 

Wood,  Spec. 

Yeoman,  Elem. 


.mes  on 


Life 


Humor 
You  may  say  I  have  it 

Because  I  laugh  at  thee; 
I  shall  not  say  I  have  it 

Till  I  learn  to  laugh  at  me. 


Love 
Love  makes  the  rains  enrich 

The  sentimental  ground; 
Love  is  what  the  poets  wish, 

And   only    we   have  found. 


Words 
They  may  be  used  by  fools 

As  cruel,  piercing  darts; 
But  more  happily  applied  as  tools 

For  mending  broken  hearts. 


Smiles 
Smiles    are    like    sunbeams, 

So  say  those  who  know; 
Why  not  leave  a  light  behind  you? 

Smile  before  you  go. 


Virtue 
Oft  we  seem  to  ill  impose 

A    borderline   of   right; 
Refrain,  O  Traveler,  from  repose 

Until   you   view  the   site. 


Happiness 
Happiness  is  a  state  of  mind 

Attained  by  saying  o'er  and  o'er: 
Today   I  shall  be  pleased  to  find 
One   thing   I'm   looking  for. 

—  Ernest  Purkey 


66 


De   Prino;     Hauser;     Elliott 


SOPHOMORES 


In  the  fall  of  1947  the  sophomores,  with  some  fa- 
miliar faces  and  some  new  ones,  again  resumed  ac- 
tivities. With  that  stinging  expression  "green  freshies" 
behind  them,  one  could  notice  a  superior  air  as  they 
now  had   a   new  freshman  class  to  "guide  and  direct." 

With  the  help  of  the  Advisory  Board,  John  Hays, 
Doris  Hendrickson,  Raymond  Bess,  George  Bacopulos, 
Jean  Borg,  Cecilia  Hallam,  Charles  De  Luka,  Janet  Mac- 
Intyre,  Rudy  Pedrotti,  Dick  Adams,  Norma  Waters,  and 
Fred  Metzke,  the  sophomores  had  a  busy  year.  Their 
closed   party  on   September  27,  gave  them  a  chance  to 


see  who  was  back  at  school.  The  all  school  "Popcorn 
Ball"  was  given  by  the  sophomores  on  December  12, 
and  was  a   huge  success. 

Sophomores  celebrated  their  event  of  the  year,  the 
Sophomore  Cotillion,  on  May  1.  A  sophomore  king  and 
queen  reigned  at  the  event.  To  close  the  year  the  sopho- 
mores gathered  out  at  the  lake  for  a  picnic. 

The  officers  were:  Louis  De  Prino,  president;  Gene 
Elliott,  vice-president;  Ann  Hauser,  secretary-treasurer; 
Assistant  Professor  G.  Bradford   Barber,  sponsor. 


67 


Abell,  Soc.  Sci. 
Acklin,  Ind.  Arts 

Anderson,  Home  Ec. 
Antoine,  Eng. 


Baker,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Barth,  Elem. 

Basham,  Bus.  Ed. 
Battiste,  Math. 


Begalka,  Elem. 
Benson,  Ag. 

Bernaciak,  Elem. 
Bidderman,  Elem. 


Bidner,  Home  Ec. 

Bitterberg,  Soc.  Sci. 

Blue,  Soc.  Sci. 


Bogue,  Bus.  Ed. 

Borg,  Elem. 

Bossingham,  Home  Ec. 


Bradley,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Brannan,  Music 
Brauer,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Broderick,  Bus.  Ed. 


Bruns,  Music 
Bury,  Math. 
Busch,  Elem. 
Byrne,  Ag. 


Calvin,  Speech 

Campbell,  Bus.  Ed. 
Carey,  Bus.  Ed. 

Carmichael,  Home  Ec. 


68 


Carlson,  Home  Ec. 
Castelli,  Bus.  Ed. 
Clayberg,  Music 
Clifford,  Soc.  Sci. 


Copeland,  Elem. 
Cox,  Math. 

Danhof,  Home  Ec. 
Day,  Soc.  Sci. 


De  Luka,  C,  H.  &  P.  E. 
De  Luka,  R.,  Eng. 
Dennis,  Elem. 

Denzer,  Spec.  Ed. 


De  Vries,  Home  Ec. 
Dick,  Elem. 

Donley,  Elem. 


Douglass,  Elem. 

Downs,  Elem. 

Duncanson,  Phys.  Sci 


Easterday,  Bio.  Sci. 
Eden,  Bus.  Ed. 

Eggenberger,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Elder,  H.  &  P.  E  . 


Elliott,  Ag. 

Ellis,  Music 
i 

Ellsman,  Eng. 

Emmons,  Elem. 


Ewing,  Music 

Fager,  Home  Ec. 
Findley,  Music 
Fleming,  Elem. 


69 


A^  ~ 


Forbes,  Eng. 
Fouts,  Elem. 
Fox,  Latin 

Franciskovich,  H.  &  P.  E. 


French,  Bus.  Ed. 

Funk,  Speech  Corr. 
Furtney,  Elem. 

Furukawa,  Elem. 


Gadbury,  Bus.  Ed. 
Gandy,  Home  Ec. 
Garls,  Bus.  Ed. 
Garrett,  Bus.  Ed. 


Getz,  Home  Ec. 

Geuther,  Home  Ec. 

Giehl,  Math. 


Gillen,  Math. 

Goble,  Elem. 

Goll,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Green,  Bus.  Ed. 
Greeson,  Math. 
Gregory,  Elem. 

Hackley,  Home  Ec. 


Hallam,  Home  Ec. 
Hammer,  Phys.  Sci. 
Hanebuth,  Bus.  Ed. 
Hanssen,  Soc.  Sci. 


Hari,  Soc.  Sci. 
Harris,  Ag. 

Hartshorn,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Hatfield,  Speech 


70 


Hauschild,  Math. 
Heeschen,  Elem. 

Henriksen,  Bus.  Ed. 
Hertz,  Bio.  Sci. 


Hileman,  Spec.  Ed. 
Hirtman,  Elem. 

Hoelting,  Bus.  Ed. 
Hoerrmann,  Elem. 


Holzhauer,  Ag. 

Holtkamp,  Bus.  Ed. 
Howell,  Ag. 
Hudson,  Ag. 


Huelsmann,  Music. 

Hvalgren,  Elem. 

Jensen,  Math. 


Johnson,  F.,  Eng. 

Johnson,  M.,  Phys.  Sci. 

Johnson,  R.,  Spec. 


Johnson,  V.,  Elem. 
Jones,  Soc.  Sci. 
Judy,  Ag. 

Kain,  Spec.  Ed. 


Kellett,  Elem. 
Kirchner,  Music 

Klonowski,  Soc.  Sci. 
Kmetz,  Music 


Knous,  Bus.  Ed. 
Koenig,  Music 

Komnick,  Bus.  Ed. 
Kreiling,  Bus.  Ed. 


71 


Kroff,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Kudelas,  Speech 
Lancaster,  Elem. 
Lange,  Bus.  Ed. 


Lanham,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Lawson,  Ag. 
Lee,  Bus.  Ed. 

Leggett,  N.  Math. 


Leigh,  Home  Ec. 
Leisson,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Lemburg,  Elem. 
Licocci,  Soc.  Sci. 


Liggett,  Speech 

Lindbeck,  Spec.  Ed. 

Lisowski,  Phys.  Sci. 


Logue,  Bus.  Ed. 

Lovins,  Ag. 

Lucas,  Elem. 


Lundberg,  Home  Ec. 
Lyons,  Elem. 

Maclntyre,  Home  Ec. 
McBride,  Bio.  Sci. 


McDermand,  Spec.  Ed. 
McFadden,  Elem. 
Mackessy,  Eng. 
Mailman,  Eng. 


Malmberg,  Phy.  Sci. 
Mancuso,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Marlinie,  Ag. 
Mason,  Soc.  Sci 


72 


Mattinson,  Spanish 
Meiner,  Soc.  Sci. 
Meinhold,  Eng. 
Melzger,  Phy.  Sci. 


Metzke,  Art 

Miller,  M.  J.,  Bus.  Ed. 
Miller,  M.  E.,  Music 
Mills,  Elem. 


Moma,  Home  Ec. 

Montgomery,  Math. 
Montross,  Music 
Morgan,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Muehling,  Elem. 

Myers,  Bus.  Ed. 

Nagel,  Elem. 


Nekagawa,  Elem. 

Ninios,  Soc.  Sci. 

Nolan,  Eng. 


Obrecht,  Home  Ec. 
Oetter,  Elem. 
Olson,  Elem. 

Opperman,  Elem. 


Owens,  Eng. 
Pacey,  Elem. 

Palmer,  J.,  Bus.  Ed. 
Palmer,  P.,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Parke,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Parmele,  Ag. 

Paulson,  Bus.  Ed. 
Pedley,  Elem. 


73 


Pedrotti,  Phy.  Sci. 
Perhach,  Spec.  Ed. 
Phillips,  Eng. 

Piazzi,  Soc.  Sci. 


Pletscher,  Music 
Prebeck,  Bus.  Ed. 
Price,  Phy.  Sci. 

Pschirrer,  Soc.  Sci. 


Raffaelle,  Eng. 

Rammel,  Spec.  Ed. 
Ray,  H.  &  P.  E. 

Redfern,  Bug.  Ed. 


Reidy,  Ind.  Arts 

Rhoda,  Home  Ec. 

Robbins,  J.,  Elem. 


Robbins,  P.,  Elem. 

Seaman,  Elem. 

Schauerte,  Elem. 


Schmidt,  Spec.  Ed. 
Schmiller,  Bus.  Ed. 
Schmitt,  Home  Ec. 
Schnehage,  Elem. 


Schneider,  Bus.  Ed. 
Schonert,  Art 

Schopp,  Home  Ec. 

Schroeder,  D.,  Home  Ec. 


Schroeder,  M.,  Home  Ec. 
Schultz,  Math. 
Seipel,  Bus.  Ed. 
Self,  Music 


74 


Shaw,  Bus.  Ed. 
Shay,  Math. 

Shoemaker,  Home  Ec. 
Sigler,  Ag. 


Siron,  Ind.  Arts 

Smith,  D.,  Home  Ec. 
Smith,  O.,  Ag. 
Specht,  Soc.  Sci. 


Spellerberg,  Art 
Sponsler,  Spanish 
Stanley,  Math. 
Steele,  Music 


Stipp,  Spec.  Ed. 

Stortz,  H.  &  P.  E. 

Stuart,  Bus.  Ed. 


Sullivan,  Home  Ec. 

Sydell,  Soc.  Sci. 

Thayer,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Thomas,  F.,  Home  Ec. 
Thomas,  T.,  Home  Ec. 
Tipton,  Bus.  Ed. 

Trachsel,  Home  Ec. 


Trembacki,  Soc.  Sci. 
Vranicar,  Eng. 

Walden,  Bus.  Ed. 


Warring,  Elem. 


Waters,  N.,  Elem. 

Waters,  N.  J.,  Bus.  Ed. 
Watkins,  Bus.  Ed. 
Weber,  Bus.  Ed. 


75 


Wysong,  Ag. 

Wise,  H.&  P.  E. 

Wirtjes,  Bus.  Ed. 

Wilson,  H.  &  P.  E. 

Williams,  Bus.  Ed. 
Wilcox,  Music 

Whitlock,  Bus.  Ed. 

Whitaker,  Music 

West,  N.,  Latin 

West,  H.,  Ag. 


SOPHOMORE 


Human   frailties  are  condemned 

By  us,  whose  faults  are  much  the  same, 

But  blinded  by  our  vanity, 

We  falsely  judge  and  cry  out  "Shame.'' 

Lord,  inspire  our  anile  minds 

And  let  forebearance  be  our  aim. 

Human  virtues  are  ignored 

By  us,  whose  jealous  natures  rule. 

And  goaded  by  resentful  pride, 

We  seek  escape   with  ridicule. 

Lord,  forgive  our  arrogance 

Lest  we  be  judged  as  jealous  fools. 

—  John   Delery 


76 


McShane;    Steckel;    Bandy 


FRESHMEN 


Twenty-one  members  of  the  Freshman  Advisory  Board 
aided  the  freshman  class  in  getting  off  to  a  good  start 
in  college  life.  Members  of  the  board,  who  represent 
all  freshmen  on  campus,  were  selected  from  the  fresh- 
man   body   at   large. 

To  initiate  their  social  life  the  freshman  class  spon- 
sored an  all-school  party  in  October.  At  homecoming 
time  they  defeated  the  sophomores  in  the  annual  tug- 
of-war.  They  also  operated  one  of  the  concessions  at  the 


Women's  League  Carnival.  The  all-school  skating  party 
sponsored  by  the  class  on  January  30  proved  to  be  a 
big  success.  There  was  a  big  turn  out  at  the  all-school 
Valentine  Record  Dance.  Boxes  of  candy  were  given 
away  as  prizes.  The  class  is  planning  to  sponsor  a  picnic 
in    May. 

The  officers  were:  Clarence  Steckel,  president;  Guy 
Bandy,  vice-president;  Kathleen  McShane,  secretary- 
treasurer;   Associate    Professor   Joseph   Cogdal,   sponsor. 


17 


Ahrens,  Eng. 
Akers,  Bus.  Ed. 
Albert,  Art 

Aldridge,  Eng. 


Anderson,  E.,  Geo. 
Anderson,  J.,  Elem. 
Anich,  H.  &  P.  E. 

Aschenbrenner,  Elem. 


Ashbrook,  Ind.  Arts 
Austin,  Elem. 

Bakker,  Home  Ec. 
Ballinger,  Phy.  Sci. 


Bamman,  Ag. 

Bandy,  Ag. 

Bankert,  Speech 


Bannon,  Ag. 

Barham,  Spanish 

Barrett,  Phy.  Sci 


Bartman,  Home  Ec. 
Batastini,  Bus.  Ed. 
Bean,  Ag. 

Beavin,  Math. 


Beckner,  Bus.  Ed. 
Beecher,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Began,  Bus.  Ed. 
Beitsch,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Bernasek,  Bus.  Ed. 
Berwanger,  Soc.  Sci. 
Beyers,  Bus.  Ed. 
Birnie,  Music 


78 


Blimling,  Eng. 
Block,  Bio.  Sci. 
Borror,  Eng. 

Bowles,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Bradley,  Math. 
Boylston,  Elem. 

Brandstetter,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Brandt,  G.,  Soc.  Sci. 


Brandt,  J.,  Soc.  Sci. 
Bray,  Bus.  Ed. 
Brian,  Bus.  Ed. 
Bright,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Brown,  H.,  Eng. 

Brown,  J.,  Soc.  Sci. 

Brown,  N.,  Spec.  Ed. 


Brown,  R.,  Bus.  Ed. 

Budd,  Elem. 

Burk,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Busby,  Ind.  Arts 
Buth,  Home  Ec. 
Calhoun,  Bus.  Ed. 
Callaby,  Bus.  Ed. 


Camboni,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Carpenter,  Elem. 
Carr,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Caudle,  Bus.  Ed. 


Challenger,  Bio.  Sci. 
Chambliss,  Phy.  Sci. 
Changnon,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Clemens,  Elem. 


79 


Clifford,  H.&  P.  E. 
Coatney,  Home  Ec. 
Condit,  Eng. 

Cooke,  Bus.  Ed. 


Copas,  Home  Ec. 
Corn,  B.,  Spec.  Ed. 
Corn,  J.,  Geo. 
Cornelius,  Elem. 


Cottrell,  Soc.  Sci. 
Cox,  Bus.  Ed. 
Coy,  Math. 

Craddock,  Ag. 


Craft,  Elem. 

Crane,  Music 

Cross,  Art 


Crump,  Soc.  Sci. 

Cullick,  Elem. 


Curtis,  Ag. 


Danekas,  Home  Ec. 
Darr,  Geo. 

Davy,  Home  Ec. 
De  Groot,  Elem. 


Devine,  Math. 

De  Werff,  Bus.  Ed. 
Dobrik,  H.&  P.  E. 
Doll,  Bus.  Ed. 


Dooley,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Douglas,  Eng. 
Doyle,  H.&  P.  E. 
Drake,  Spanish 


80 


Dumont,  Bus.  Ed. 
DyrofF,  Elem. 
Earl,  Elem. 

Ebert,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Eklund,  H.&  P.  E. 
Elder,  Home  Ec. 
Fager,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Feeney,  Elem. 


Fellows,  H.&  P.  E. 
Fenton,  Home  Ec. 
Flessner,  Home  Ec. 
Fowler,  Elem. 


Francis,  Art 

Francois,  Music 

Frederick,  Home  Ec. 


Fredericks,  Elem. 

French,  Phy.  Sci. 

Fuchre,  Bio.  Sci. 


Fuess,  Elem. 

Furtney,  Bus.  Ed. 
Gallagher,  Speech 
Gant,  Ind.  Arts 


Garber,  Soc.  Sci. 
Gardiner,  Art 
Garner,  Music 

Garretson,  Elem. 


Gentes,  Music 

Gilmore,  L,  Bus.  Ed. 
Gilmore,  R.,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Goddard,  Music 


81 


Goetze,  Math. 

Grantham,  Speech 
Gray,  Elem. 
Greene,  Art 


Gross,  Spec.  Ed. 

Gustafson,  Bus.  Ed. 
Guth,  Elem. 
Hall,  Soc.  Sci. 


Hallam,  Bus.  Ed. 
Haller,  Math. 

Halterman,  Elem. 
Haneline,  Soc.  Sci. 


Hardy,  Art 

Harris,  Bio. 

Harrison,  E.,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Harrison,  F.,  Bio.  Sci. 

Hartel,  Bus.  Ed. 

Harton,  Bus.  Ed. 


Headrick,  Art 

Heald,  H.&  P.  E. 

Heaton,  Math. 

Held,  Elem. 


Henderson,  J.,  Ind.  Arts 
Henderson,  R.,  Elem. 
Henebry,  Phy.  Sci. 
Henry,  Speech 


Hepner,  Math. 
Hextell,  Ag. 
Hill,  H.&  P.  E. 

Hilliard,  Home  Ec. 


82 


Hinderland,  Music 
Hinshaw,  Home  Ec. 
Hoover,  Ind.  Arts 
Hopkins,  Elem. 


Hozenfleld,  Spanish 
Hudak,  Elem. 

Huffington,  Elem. 

Humphrey,  Home  Ec. 


Irons,  Ind.  Arts 
Janick,  Soc.  Sci. 
Janssen,  Bus.  Ed. 
Jenkins,  Elem. 


Johannes,  Home  Ec. 

Johnson,  C,  Elem. 

Johnson,  D.,  Elem. 


Johnson,  R.,  Phy.  Sci. 

Johnson,  W.,  Speech 

Jones,  Home  Ec. 


Kalips,  H.&  P.  E. 
Kampwerth,  Art 
Karloski,  Soc.  Sci. 
Keeney,  Music 


Keeran,  Bus.  Ed. 
Kenyon,  Soc.  Sci. 
Kerchner,  Bus.  Ed. 
King,  Ind.  Arts 


Kinsella,  Speech 
Kipling,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Kirkman,  Elem. 
Klimek,  Eng. 


83 


Koons,  Music 
Kramer,  Elem. 

Krummrich,  Soc.  Sci. 
Landolt,  Soc.  Sci. 


Langan,  Bus.  Ed. 
Larson,  Elem. 
Lawless,  Ag. 

Lehn,  Home  Ec. 


Leigh,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Lesher,  Geo. 

Liebman,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Lober,  Elem. 


Lockhart,  Ag. 

Logan,  Home  Ec. 

Lombardi,  Elem. 


Long,  Music 

Lovekamp,  H.  &  P.  E. 

Lowe,  Home  Ec. 


Lucas,  H.&  P.  E. 
Luce,  Bus.  Ed. 

Lyons,  K.,  Home  Ec. 
Lyons,  M.,  Eng. 


McCormick,  Math. 
McDonald,  Ind.  Arts 
McKee,  Eng. 

McLaughlin,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Mackey,  Math. 

Madacey,  Spec.  Ed. 
Maile,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Maitland,  Soc.  Sci. 


84 


Mapes,  Elem. 
Martin,  C,  Eng. 
Martin,  D.,  Elem. 
Martin,  J.,  Elem. 


Martin,  P.,  Elem. 

Martin,  W.,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Martinus,  Art 

Maurer,  Home  Ec. 


May,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Merkel,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Merritt,  Elem. 
Meyer,  R.,  Art 


Meyer,  R.  M.,  H.  &  P.  E. 

Meyers,  Bus.  Ed. 

Micka,  Math 


17. 


\ 


Miller,  A.,  Home  Ec. 

Miller,  K.,  H.  &  P.  E. 

Miller,  M.,  Bus.  Ed. 


Mills,  Ag. 

Minger,  Elem. 

Mombrun,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Musiclc,  Bus.  Ed. 


Nostler,  Soc.  Sci. 

Neuswangsr,  Home  Ec. 
Newby,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Norbeck,  Eng. 


Nugent,  Elem. 

Nissen,  Home  Ec. 
Oko,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Oltman,  Eng. 


85 


Ort,  Ind.  Arts 

Osborn,  Bus.  Ed. 
Parker,  Eng. 
Parsons,  Elem. 


Patterson,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Pedigo,  Elem. 

Pedroni,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Peter,  Elem. 


Petersen,  Bus.  Ed. 
Petersen,  Elem. 
Pfeifer,  Soc.  Sci. 
Phillabaum,  Elem. 


Pratt,  Home  Ec. 

Punke,  Bus.  Ed. 

Radcliflf,  Bus.  Ed. 


Radenbaugh,  H.  &  P.  E. 

Radunzel,  Ind.  Arts 

Rainey,  Elem. 


Raley,  Edmond,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Raley,  Edward,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Rowlings,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Reaman,  Home  Ec. 


Reed,  E.,  Bus.  Ed. 
Reed,  M.,  Bio. 
Ries,  Math. 
Riley,  Math. 


Ripper,  Music 

Robinson,  Music 
Rosene,  Music 
Ross,  Home  Ec. 


86 


Rouse,  Ag. 

Ruble,  Soc.  Sci. 
Rudman,  Soc.  Sci. 
Saylor,  Math. 


Schlabach,  Music 
Schlosser,  Home  Ec. 
Schlotman,  Eng. 
Schmid,  Eng. 


Schmoll,  Soc.  Sci. 
Schneider,  Ind.  Arts 
Scholl,  Ag. 

Schroeder,  Alma,  Home  Ec. 


Schroeder,  Arlayne,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Scott,  Spanish 

Sengpiel,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Seversn,  Music 

Sheppard,  H.  &  P.  E. 

Sherbert,  Speech 


Shields,  Music 
Short,  Ag. 

Shryock,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Simberger,  Phy.  Sci. 


Simpson,  Elem. 
Siron,  Soc.  Sci. 
Skau,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Smith,  E.,  Elem. 


Smith,  S.,  Elem. 
Solomon,  Music 
Souers,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Soules,  Home  Ec. 


87 


Squaglia,  Spec.  Ed. 
Stallions,  Bus.  Ed. 
Stanley,  Art 

Staszech,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Staubus,  Home  Ec. 
Steckel,  Eng. 

Sterling,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Stewart,  Home  Ec. 


Srimeling,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Stoops,  Bus.  Ed. 
Stout,  Eng. 

Straub,  Home  Ec. 


Streed,  Speech 

Strejcek,  H.  &  P.  E. 

Sullivan,  D.,  Math. 


Sullivan,  W.,  Phy.  Sci. 

Sunnesen,  Eng. 

Sutter,  Home  Ec. 


Swartout,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Sweeney,  Phy.  Sci. 
Taylor,  Home  Ec. 
Tenscher,  Home  Ec. 


Thomas,  Ag. 

Thompson,  Spec.  Ed. 

Tinsley,  Home  Ec. 

Travis,  Bus.  Ed. 


Turnquist,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Vandeveer,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Verhines,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Vitzthum,  Eng. 


83 


Wagner,  H.  &  P.  E. 

Walker,  Bus.  Ed. 

Walsh,  Elem. 

Walter,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Wamba,  Bus.  Ed. 
Wardell,  Music 
Warring,  Bus.  Ed. 
Waterstreet,  Math. 


Watson,  Bus.  Ed. 
Weaver,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Weber,  G.,  H.  &  P.  E. 
Weber,  J.,  Bus.  Ed. 


Welsh,  Soc.  Sci. 

Wesloh,  Music 

Wessel,  Elem. 


West,  Home  Ec. 

Whitcomb,  Elem. 

Wiemer,  Ind.  Arts 


Williams,  G.,  Bio.  Sci. 
Williams,  J.,  Ind.  Arts 
Williams,  N.,  Home  Ec. 
Wilson,  J.,  Elem. 


Wilson,  S.,  H.&  P.  E. 
Winglo,  Speech 

Winship,  H.  &  P.  E. 

Witherspoon,  H.  &  P.  E. 


Woertz,  AAusic 
Wolf,  Soc.  Sci. 

Woodrum,  Spec.  Ed. 
Yocum,  Bus.  Ed. 


89 


Yount,  Speech 

Zaborsky,  H.  &  P.  E. 

Zillman,  Soc.  Sci. 


Zimmerman,  C,  Spec.  Ed. 

Zimmerman,  D.,  Home  Ec. 

Zimmerman,  W.,  Elem. 


THAT  WHICH  WE  SEEK 

Why  are  we  here? 

Not  to  gain  that 

Which  will  acquire  for  us 

Riches  in  gold, 

But  riches  in  happiness: 

Happiness  to  be  gained  by  our  knowing 

That  others   will  learn  from  our  teaching. 

Happiness  for  ourselves  as  others  learn: 

That  is  all  —  we  ask  no  more. 

—  Jim  Chambliss 


90 


I       V       I 


I        E 


ORGRDIZRTIOnS: 

DEPflRTdlEnT  CLUBS 
HOnORflRy  SOCIETIES 
SPECIAL  ORGflniZflTIOnS 


92 


DEPARTMENT  CLUBS 


Standing:  Miss  Becker.    First  Row:  fry,  Lehn;  Gardiner;  Stanley;  Sterns;  Gast;  Lubbs.    Second  Row:  Mentzer;  Kirkpatrick;  Johnston;  Kroff;  Mr. 
Barford;    Ogden;   Steinhagen.     Third   Row:   Albert;   Meyer;   Greene;   Tully. 


PALETTE 


The  Palette  Club  was  formed  as  an  informal  extension 
of  the  cultural  and  educational  activities  of  the  Art  De- 
partment. Although  the  club  is  composed  mainly  of  Art 
majors  and  minors,  the  membership  is  also  open  to  Home 
Economics  majors.  The  programs  for  the  year  were  a 
judicious  mixture  of  talks  by  members  of  the  Art  de- 
partment, social  evenings  and  entertainment.  Refresh- 
ments are  always  served.  The  high  spot  of  the  year  in 
the    club's    activities    was    the    annual    Beaux    Art    Ball, 


sponsored  by  the  club,  which  used  as  its  theme  for 
this  year  Ancient  Greece  and  suitable  decorations.  Their 
yearly  program  closed  in  May  with  the  annual  banquet 
at  the  Roger's  Hotel. 

Prominent  figures  in  the  club's  mural  of  the  year  were 
Mr.  George  Barford,  sponsor;  Mildred  Fry,  president; 
Fred  Metzge,  vice-president;  Anna  Marie  Lubbs,  secre- 
tary; Barbara  Gast,  treasurer;  and  John  Tully,  publicity. 


93 


First  Row:  Stuart;  Warsher;  Whitlock;  Henricksen;  Mitchell;  Calleby;  Harton.  Second  Row:  Scholl;  Steele;  Yasum;  Lange;  Burkhart; 
Eden;  Garrett;  Lee;  Miss  Day.  Third  Row:  Lockenvitz;  Hudak;  Palmer;  Kapraun;  Green;  Lucero;  Cowles;  Bruno;  Ward;  Miss  Webb;  Dr. 
Toll.  Fourth  Row:  Penn;  Redfern;  Dreiling;  Gee;  Marich;  Henken;  Munson;  Palmer;  Campbell;  Mrs.  Toll;  Miss  Jessa.  Fifth  Row:  Kiiskila; 
Taylor;    Campbell;    Darnell;    Dawson;    Dickson;    Drinhaus;    Jones;    Garls;   Gustafson;    Hager;   Mr.   Admire. 


BUSINESS  EDUCATION 


"Business  before  pleasure"  can  well  be  applied  to 
the  Business  Education  club,  although  it  is  not  their 
official  motto.  Specifically,  the  purpose  of  the  organiza- 
tion is  to  create  an  interest  in  commercial  teaching. 

Various  secretaries  and  business  men  of  Bloomington- 
Normal  spoke  at  the  meetings  to  foster  an  interest  in 
the  different  phases  of  business. 

Social   activities  of  the  year  consisted  of  initiation  at 


the  University  Farm,  a  Christmas  party,  and  the  annual 
spring  picnic.  The  group  also  welcomed  Dr.  Lewis  Toll 
as  new  head  of  the  Business  Department. 

Howard  Knous,  who  was  responsible  for  the  manag- 
ing of  the  club,  was  assisted  by  Robert  Taylor,  vice- 
president;  Dortha  Stuart,  secretary;  Audrey  Watkins, 
treasurer;  Nita  Dawson,  program  chairman;  and  faculty 
sponsor,    Assistant    Professor    Harry    F.    Admire. 


94 


First  Row:  Condie;  Halderman;  Busch;  Hoerrman;  unidentified;  Hayden;  Huffington.  Second  Row:  Lober;  Malmstead;  Barth;  Ashbrenner 
Nugent;  Schauerte;  Guth;  Harrington;  Smith.  Third  Row:  Gable;  Pollock;  Worsley;  Goudreau;  Carpenter;  Fredrick;  Jedlicka;  W.  Jones 
Erickson;  Reynolds.  Fourth  Row:  Williams;  Dennis;  Emmons;  Lyons;  Muffley;  Bernaciak;  Henderson;  Bidderman;  Anderson;  Headley 
Peter;  Ridlen.  Background:  Hall;  Mrs.  Buehler;  Lampke;  Dumont;  Waters;  Hogle;  Pacey;  Borg;  Oetter;  Earl;  Johnson;  Wilson;  Fowler 
Boussum;  Summer;  Cornelius;   Held;   Martin;  Austin;  Lucas;  Dr.   Cooper;   Huscher;    Rinehart;   Gillis;  Peter;   Bromaghim. 


ELEMENTARY  EDUCATION 


An  honor  captured  by  the  Elementary  club  this  year 
was  the  election  of  one  of  their  members,  Martha  Lou 
Alverson,    as    Homecoming   Queen. 

In  October,  the  officers,  Helen  Ridlen,  president;  Betty 
Hall,  vice-president;  Jean  Borg,  secretary;  and  Dottie 
Barth,  treasurer,  accompanied  by  Dr.  Margaret  Cooper, 
sponsor,  journeyed  to  Western  State  Teachers  College 
at  Macomb  for  the  Association  for  Childhood  Education 
State  Convention. 

Other  activities  of  the  club  included  a  welcome  tea, 
the  annual  picnic,  Homecoming  banquet,  talent  night, 
Christmas  party,  and  a  spring  banquet  with  installation 


of  the  new  officers. 

One  of  the  most  important  phases  of  the  work  of  the 
club  is  its  community  activities  with  children.  Various 
members  participated  in  service  activities  at  the  Baby 
Fold,  I.S.S.C.S.  and  Day  Nursery.  A  directory  was  com- 
piled from  a  survey  made  to  determine  where  the  club 
could  be  of  service. 

The  objectives  of  the  Elementary  club  are  to  stimulate 
and  develop  professional  ideals,  interests,  and  aims, 
and  to  be  of  service  to  the  children  of  our  community 
through  activities  performed. 


95 


First  Row:  Behrens;  Britton;  unidentified;  unidentified;  Pratt;  Harner;  D.  Smith;  unidentified.  Second  Row:  Logan;  Hilliard;  Staub;  Ross; 
Coatney;  unidentified;  Gassman;  unidentified.  Third  Row:  Bossing  ham  •  Leigh;  unidentified;  unidentified;  unidentified;  Ritchie;  Schroeder; 
DeVries;  unidentified;  unidentified;  unidentified.  Standing:  Blake;  McNeil;  unidentified;  Miss  Conkey;  Miss  Dirks;  Miss  Johnson;  Thomp- 
son;   Baker;    Rhoda;    Lowe;    Copas;    Elder;    Moma;    Fenten;    Morrison. 


HOME  ECONOMICS 


If  the  road  to  a  man's  heart  is  really  through  his 
stomach,  these  "Home  Ec  Majors  and  Minors"  should 
hold  a  round  trip  ticket.  It's  also  common  knowledge 
that  these  girls  can  work  wonders  with  the  needle  and 
thread,  and  when  it  comes  to  social  life  they  display 
their  talents  in  Home  Ec  club. 

The  candlelight  service  held  at  the  beginning  of  the 
year  gave  new  members  an  opportunity  to  become  in- 
itiated into  the  club.    It  was  followed  by  a  picnic  which 


helped  new  members  to  become  acquainted  with  other 
members  of  the  organization.  The  Christmas  party  given 
in  December  afforded  an  opportunity  for  the  Home  Ec 
students  to  get  together  with  their  guests  for  games, 
dancing,  and  caroling. 

With  Lois  Morrison,  president;  Gloria  DeVries,  vice- 
president;  Georgianna  Britton,  secretary-treasurer;  Shir- 
ley Jacobs,  program;  and  Miss  Blossom  Johnson,  sponsor 
the  club  has  chalked  up  another  successful  year. 


96 


First  Row:  Hodge;  Bates;  Weaver;  Williams,  Charles;  Parker;  Porter;  Dowdall.  Second  Row:  Gillen;  Norini;  Gerten;  Denzer;  Schneeberg;  Brauer,- 
Brown,  Howard;  Brown,  Orville;  Maurice;  Grine.  Third  Row:  Wilkey;  McDonald;  Bates;  Rippel,  Volstorff;  Paoli;  Aglesby;  Franciskovich;  Ralleigh; 
Jackson;  Williams;  Jorstadt;  Townsend;  Busby.  Fourth  Row:  Galloway;  Hegner;  Hewitt;  Long;  Freese;  Johnson;  Kessler;  Herberts;  Williams, 
W.;  Davis;  Dr.  Ashbrook;  Hauge;  Blakeman;  Halm.  Back  Row:  Uhrig,-  Freese,   Art;  Thompson;  Tully;   Schultz. 


INDUSTRIAL  ARTS 


A  vote  of  thanks  can  be  given  to  the  Industrial  Arts 
members  for  publishing  the  University  Student  Directory. 
They  are  also  credited  with  publishing  and  distributing 
the  Homecoming  programs. 

Prominent  among  the  Industrial  Arts  Club's  activities 
were  the  field  trips  taken  to  Dodge  Dickinson  Manufac- 
turers, Colonial  Radio  Corporation,  Stappenbeck  Book- 
binders, and  MaGirl  Furnace  and  Foundry  Company. 


At  a  number  of  the  meetings  during  the  year,  repre- 
sentatives from  various  branches  of  the  Industrial  Arts 
field  spoke  to  the  members. 

Frank  Thompson  was  the  president  of  the  club;  Leven 
Dowdall,  vice-president;  Richard  Van  Scoyoc,  secretary; 
Harold  Wilkey,  treasurer;  and  Assistant  Professor  How- 
ard O.  Reed,  faculty  sponsor. 


97 


Standing:    Barz.     Seated,    First   Row:    Corbitt;   Miss    Geweke;   West.     Second  Row:   Carr;   Phillips;   DeLapp,-   Ahrens;  and   Schmid. 


LATIN 


To  others,  they  may  be  only  a  group  of  sheet-draped 
people  playing  cards  by  candle  light,  but  among  them- 
selves they  are  known  as  members  of  the  Latin  club 
who  are  wearing  togas  and  amusing  themselves  in 
approved  Roman  fashion. 

The  group  is  becoming  known  on  campus  as  an 
authority  on  Hades  —  ISNU  style.  This  was  used  as  the 
theme  of  both  their  Homecoming  float  and  their  booth 
for  the  Women's  League  Carnival. 

Under  the  direction   of  Dr.   Lenore  Geweke,  the  club 


sponsor,  they  studied  interesting  subjects  pertaining  to 
Roman  life  and  customs.  Christmas  carols  were  sung  in 
Latin    for    the    December    meeting. 

The  final  meeting  for  the  year  was  a  banquet  at  which 
the  faculty    members   were  guests. 

The  Roman  magistrates  of  this  sheet-draped  group 
are  Myra  Barz,  president;  Norma  West,  vice-president; 
Norma  West,  program  chairman;  Mary  Corbitt,  secre- 
tary-treasurer; and  Assistant  Professor  Lenore  Geweke, 
faculty  sponsor. 


98 


LOWELL  MASON 


The  Lowel  Mason  Club  named  after  the  "Father  of 
Public  School  Music,"  is  open  to  all  music  majors  and 
minors,  and  has  as  its  goal  the  furtherance  of  music 
appreciation  and  the  building  of  social  relationships 
with  the  music  department. 

The  club  started  their  activities  with  a  picnic  at  Fell 
Park,  where  the  members  were  entertained  by  the 
pledges.  During  the  following  week  the  pledges  cli- 
maxed their  "hell"  week  by  scrubbing  the  steps  of  Old 
Main  with  a  toothbrush.  During  Homecoming  the  club 
held  a  reception  in  the  music  office.    At  Christmas  time, 


the  club  visited  hospitals  and  shut-ins  and  sang  Christ- 
mas carols  for  them.  "Hollywood  Bound,"  directed  by 
Margaret  Wittmer,  was  presented  by  the  club  in  the 
spring  and  was  the  first  operetta  on  campus  for  ten 
years.  The  season  was  climaxed  with  a  spring  party  and 
picnic. 

Conductors  of  the  organization  were  Bob  Hull,  presi- 
dent; Charlotte  Bennett,  secretary;  Norma  Hewitt,  treas- 
urer; Donna  Hirtman,  historian;  Don  Sherrard,  publicity; 
Barbara  Findley,  program  chairman;  and  Miss  Margaret 
Westhoff,  sponsor. 


99 


First  Row:   Becker;  Harwood;  Droste;  Wood.    Second  Row:  Howell;  Wysong;    Kemnitz;    Kraph;    Dr.    Miller.     Third   Row:    Hvalgren;   M.    Frink; 
H.   Frink;  Allen;  Dr.   Martens;  Moore;  Dr.  Young. 


NATURE  STUDY 


The  Nature  Study  Club  is  an  all-campus  organization. 
The  only  requirement  for  membership  is  a  genuine  in- 
terest in  nature  and  the  out-of-doors. 

The  programs  for  the  year  consisted  of  talks,  movies, 
demonstrations,  and  recreation  of  various  types. 

A  full  day's  field  trip  was  held  in  the  fall  and  another 
trip    was    held    in    the    spring.     Informal    hikes    and    un- 


scheduled  outings  were  also   part  of  the  activities  en- 
joyed by  the  club. 

Nature  enthusiasts  guiding  the  members  were  Aaron 
Wysong,  president;  Donna  Racobs,  vice-president;  Irene 
Guither,  secretary-treasurer;  Bob  Kraph,  publicity  chair- 
man; and  Dr.  J.  E.  Young,  sponsor. 


100 


First  Row:  Tyler;  Pollak;  Thomas.  Second  Row:  Harper;  Smith;  Frink;  Sutton;  Morrison.  Third  Row:  Giacobassi;  Kemnitz;  Cretcher;  Proctor; 
Streid;  Grossart.  Fourth  Row:  Husmann;  Brown;  Worth;  Kraus.  Fifth  Row:  Kraft;  Atkins;  Cross,  B.;  Dr.  McCormick.  Sixth  Row:  Dr. 
Evans;  and    King. 


SCIENCE  CLUB 


Science  Club  consists  of  majors  and  minors  in  the 
fields  of  agriculture,  elementary  science,  biology,  geog- 
raphy, home  economics,  and  physical  science.  The  wide 
variety  of  departmental  membership  assures  the  mem- 
bers that  they  will  learn  "something  new"  at  every 
meeting.  The  members  are  selected  from  the  different 
fields  on  the  basis  of  their  scholastic  attainments. 

The  club  meets  monthly  for  a  program  that  involves 


some  scientific  aspects  of  the  world.  In  the  spring  the 
club  held  their  annual  picnic  for  relaxation  and  en- 
joyment. 

This  scientific  experiment  was  led  by  G.  Harlowe 
Evans,  president;  Ray  Tyler,  vice-president;  Lois  Morri- 
son, secretary-treasurer;  and  Merle  Wurth  and  Lois 
Smith,   executive  committee. 


101 


Row  One:  Kenyon;  Mason;  Flannery;  McShane;  McCarey;  Sidell;  Janick;  Allman.  Row  Two:  Kieser;  Vranicar;  McKee;  Strubhar;  Wenger; 
Karloski;  A.  Lubbs;  Jones.  Row  Three:  Crowell;  Dr.  Tasher;  Skau;  Cornelius;  Stuart;  Headley;  Fosse;  Scully;  Becher;  Mrech;  Paepke;  Driscoll; 
Landolt;   Hansen;    Rudman;    Danekas;   Brayton;   Crump;    Bernasek. 


SOCIAL  SCIENCE 


To  promote  and  maintain  interest  in  the  social  sciences 
is  the  purpose  of  the  Social  Science  club.  It  seeks  to 
fulfill  its  purpose  through  public  forums,  discussion 
groups,  and  the  showing  of  documentary  films. 

Its  public  forums  have  presented  such  provocative 
topics  as  "Free  Enterprise  vs.  State  Collectivism"  and 
"Teacher  Strikes."  The  Social  Science  club  does  not  be- 
come inactive  during  the  summer  session,  but  maintains 
a  year-round  schedule  of  activities  on  campus.  During 
the  summer  of  1947  a  public  forum  was  held  in  Capen 
Auditorium  on  the  "Significance  of  the  Truman  Doc- 
trine." Since  it  was  broadcast  over  radio  station  WJBC, 
this    program    was    noteworthy    because    it    was    in    the 


nature  of  a  real  community  service. 

The  club  sponsors  the  annual  Homecoming  parade  as 
part  of  its  plan  to  participate  in  and  support  school 
activities.  It  has  a  regular  entry  in  the  annual  University 
Club  Stunt  Show,  and  its  side  show  was  one  of  the  fea- 
tures of  the  Women's  League  Carnival  in  December. 

The  officers  for  the  year  were:  Harmon  E.  Peaco, 
president;  Robert  Bowers,  vice-president;  Maryrose 
McBride,  recording  secretary;  James  Patzer,  treasurer; 
Hildegarde  Fosse,  corresponding  secretary;  John  Miles, 
custodian;  Jack  Uhrig,  sergeant-at-arms;  Dr.  Lucy  L. 
Tasher,  sponsor. 


102 


Firsf  Row:   Kaercher;  Sprecker;  Lindbeck;  Kane;  Rammel.    Second  Row:   Reynold;   Smith;   Brown;  Watke;  Quinby;  Schmidt;  Stipp.  Third  Row: 
Rennels;     Zimmerman;     Woodrum;     Thompson;     Shottick;     Krug;     Felix;    Wood. 


SPECIAL  EDUCATION 


A  newly  created  organization  is  the  Special  Education 
Club,  sponsored  by  Dr.  Rose  Parker.  The  club  is  com- 
posed of  those  students  in  the  Division  of  Special  Edu- 
cation and  anyone  interested  in  Special  Education.  This 
year's  activities  have  been  guided  by  Dick  Krug,  presi- 
dent; Andrew  Shottick,  vice-president;  Betty  Schmidt, 
record  secretary;  Mary  Lou  Stipp,  correspondence  secre- 
tary; Don  Widameyer,  custodian;  Bill  Felix,  treasurer; 
and   Mark  Tucci,   sergeant-at-arms. 

The  purpose  of  the  Special  Education  club  is  to  pro- 
mote   interest    in    exceptional    children    and    to    sponsor 


projects  for  their  benefit,  and  to  give  a  means  for  social 
contacts  among  students  in  the  Division  of  Special  Edu- 
cation. 

ISNU's  building  program  includes  a  new  building,  the 
only  one  of  its  kind,  for  the  Division  of  Special  Educa- 
tion. 

We  predict  a  great  future  for  the  Special  Education 
club. 

In  April  they  were  invited  to  become  affiliated  with 
the  International  Council  for  Exceptional  Children, 
Bloomington-Normal  Chapter. 


103 


First  Row:  Molleoe;  Johnson;  Strejck;  Kneer;  Berry;  Alderson;  Steele;  Anick.  Second  Row:  Brown;  Woerner;  Hoelting;  Lanham;  Monte; 
Kempel;  Sheppard;  Surrett;  Ashcraft;  Desmeyer;  Testa;  McLaughlin.  Third  Row:  Schumacher;  Wagner;  Blake;  Fagar;  Mancruso;  Elder; 
Eggenberger;  Dobrik;  Chambers;  Crump;  Ray;  Merkel;  Martin;  Schultz;  Riley;  Dr.  Smith.  Fourth  Row:  Leisson;  Galloway;  Verhines; 
Hvalgren;  Beitch;  Reig;  Cairns;  Whitlock;  Harrison;  Bradley;  Walters;  Junis;  Frink;  Grosh;  Patterson;  Jackson;  Happic;  Wilson.  Back  Row: 
Leigh;    Pagels;    Palmer;    Steinhagen;    Dooley;    Duncan;    Rowlings;    Mombrun;    Olson;    Wilson;    Davis;    Grupe. 


PHYSICAL  EDUCATION  CLUB 


The  Physical  Education  Club  probably  brings  to  the 
mind  of  the  layman  the  thought  of  "sports";  however, 
"sports"  are  only  one  of  the  functions  of  the  club.  The 
monthly  meetings  brings  to  its  members  not  only  recrea- 
tion, but  also  professional,  educational,  and  social  op- 
portunities. 

One  of  their  outstanding  functions  this  year  was  a 
Christmas  Book  Shop  which  helped  to  acquaint  students 
with  the  better  books  published  in  the  physical  educa- 
tion profession.  They  also  played  Santa  Claus,  an  annual 
custom,  to  the  boys  of  Victory  Hall  by  giving  them  gifts 


and  leading  games  and  songs  around  the  Christmas 
tree. 

Each  spring  the  club  promotes  field  trips  off  campus, 
and  the  final  get-to-gether  was  a  breakfast  honoring  the 
graduating  seniors. 

If  after  all  this  you  would  like  to  know  still  more 
about  the  functions  of  the  club,  we  suggest  that  you  see 
Christine  Schumacher,  president;  Marian  Kneer,  vice- 
president;  Helen  Riley,  secretary;  Marie  Schultz,  treas- 
urer; or  Assistant  Professor  Gwen  Smith,  faculty  sponsor. 


104 


HONORARY  SOCIETIES 


First    Row:    McVickar;    Elliott;    Howell;    Claus;    A.  Hanis.      Second    Row:     Wilson;     Sigler;     Zimmerman;     L.     Hughes;     McDonald;     Mr.     Green. 
Third   Row:   Judy;   Smith;   Byrne;   Stroud;   Head. 


Professor    Hudelson;    Dr.    Elder;    Elliott;    Dr.    Holbert;    Adams 


The  highlight  of  the  year  for  the  Alpha  Tau  Alpha, 
honorary  agriculture  fraternity,  was  the  yearly  banquet 
at  which  Gene  L.  Elliott  was  awarded  the  Holbert 
Medal,  the  most  coveted  medal  in  the  agriculture  de- 
partment. 


ALPHA  TAU 
ALPHA 


Other  activities  of  the  year  included  initiation,  educa- 
tional   movies,  judging   days,   and   the  spring   picnic. 

Training  the  future  agriculture  teachers  to  be  leaders 
in  their  communities,  and  developing  a  true  professional 
spirit  in  the  teaching  of  agriculture  are  the  two  purposes 
of  the  Alpha  Tau  Alpha. 

The  officers  for  the  year  were  Edward  McVickar, 
president;  James  Stroud,  vice-president;  John  Clause, 
secretary-treasurer;  Gene  Howell,  reporter;  and  Assist- 
ant Professor  John  Green,  faculty  sponsor. 


105 


Seated:    Hrehovcsik;    Witherspoon;    Hartshorn;    R.    Meyer;    L.    Johnson;   E.   Hileman;   L.    Ball.     Standing:   Mr.   Gillett;   Daley;   De   Graff;   Mad- 
drey;   French;   Buss;   Yarr;  Weber;  Thomas;  Abbott;    Mr.    Horton. 


GAMMA  PHI 


Flying  high  again  this  year  was  the  Gamma  Phi,  hon- 
orary physical  fraternity,  as  it  sponsored  the  annual 
Gym  Circus,  which  was  the  highlight  of  the  year.  The 
Circus  was  staged  and  directed  by  members  of  the 
organization,     and    consisted    solely    of    school    talent. 

The  objectives  of  Gamma  Phi  are  to  stimulate  interest 
in     gymnastic     achievement     among     the     students     on 


campus,  and  in  schools  of  other  communities.  Members 
of  Gamma  Phi  also  provide  entertainment  for  vcrious 
other   organizations. 

Sponsored  by  Mr.  F.  Gillett,  the  club  was  led  by 
Lyle  Ball,  president;  Robert  Thomas,  vice-president;  and 
Norma    Bland,   secretary-treasurer. 


106 


First   Row:    Peterson;   Bell;   Martin;   Harvey;    Plese;   Knight.     Second  Row:     Heiniger;     McDavitt;     White;     Dillon;     Hodak;     Paepke;     Crompton; 
L.    Smith;    Patzer;    Barton;    Giacobassi;    King;   Goetz;   Yahr.    Third  Row:    Husmann;    Miglio;    Fallon;    Bodine;    Cottrell;    Lathrop;    Gueffroy. 


GAMMA  THETA  UPSILON 


If  one  sees  a  person  staring  at  the  weather  vane  atop 
North  Hall,  beaming  happily  when  it  starts  to  rain,  or 
staring  gloomily  at  a  sky  dark  with  clouds,  it's  just  a 
geography  major  or  minor  whose  weather  prediction 
has  come  true  (or  hasn't  come  true)  as  the  case  may  be, 
trying  to  decide  what  he  did  wrong.  If  one  mentions  a 
trip  to  Bloomington  for  the  afternoon,  someone  will 
probably  have  a  map  handy  to  help  determine  the  best 
possible  rout3. 


More  formal  activities  of  the  Gamma  Theta  Upsilon 
were  a  student  quiz  program,  field  trip  movies,  and  geo- 
graphical talks  by  various  speakers.  As  more  social  ac- 
tivities a  Christmas  party  and  a  spring  picnic  were  held. 

The  officers  for  the  year  were:  Evelyn  Bell,  president; 
Voris  King,  vice-president;  Esther  Heiniger,  secretary; 
Marjorie  Goetz,  treasurer;  Bill  Hodge,  program  chair- 
man; Eunice  Egges,  publicity  chairman;  and  Dr.  Harry 
Lathrop,  sponsor. 


107 


First  Row:  Broderick;  Proctor;  Mrs.  Catey.  Second  Row:  Cross,  B.;  Ward;  Kraus;  Goetz;  Summer;  Dr.  Henderson.  Third  Row  Smith;  Hahn; 
Cross,  K.;  Grossart.  Fourth  Row:  Larson;  Reeser;  Dean  Keaton;  Krause;  Cullinan;  Osborn;  Martin;  Bell;  Herget.  Fifth  Row:  Mrs.  Peterson; 
Alverson;    Schultz;    Harvey;    Scully. 


KAPPA  DELTA  EPSILON 


"Improving  Student  Teaching"  was  the  year's  theme 
of  Kappa  Delta  Epsilon,  national  education  sorority, 
organized  in  1933  to  promote  the  professional  and  per- 
sonal development  of  prospective  teachers. 

A  talk  on  "Improving  Student  Teaching"  by  Dr. 
Bjarne  R.  Ullsvik  introduced  the  annual  program.  At 
the  following  meeting  Miss  Margaret  Parrett  discussed 
"Problems  of  a  Beginning  Teacher,"  and  at  the  Home- 
coming Dinner  Miss  Nancy  Raisbeck   told  of  her  library 


work  in  Germany.  Other  programs  consisted  of  group 
discussions  on  "Student  Teaching  Off  Campus"  and 
"We're  All  Student  Teachers."  On  the  social  side  were 
a  Christmas  party,  two  pledge  programs,  a  picnic,  and 
the  annual  Founders'  Day  Banquet. 

Officers  were:  Marjorie  Goetz,  president;  Connie 
Thomassen,  vice-president;  Georgia  Grossart  and  Char- 
lotte Broderick,  secretaries;  Norma  Reeser,  treasurer;  and 
Dr.  Stella  Henderson,  sponsor. 


108 


First   Row:   Thomassen;   Smith;    Dean;   Krause;   Cross,    B.     Second   Row:   Kraus;   King;   Worth;   Kneer;   Cross,   K.     Third  Row:   Paekpe;   Harvey; 
Bell;    Wheeler;    Diener;    Hackman;    Peaco.     Fourth    Row:   Dean    Schroeder. 


KAPPA  DELTA  PI 


Kappa  Delta  Pi,  national  honor  society  in  education, 
enjoys  the  distinction  of  being  the  oldest  honorary 
organization  on  campus.  Invitation  to  membership  is 
extended  to  upperclassmen  with  high  scholastic  stand- 
ing. Monthly  programs  were  presented  by  both  stu- 
dents and  faculty.  Activities  for  the  year  began  with  the 
KDP  formal  initiation  at  the  Homecoming  Reception.  At 
the  December  meeting  a  "lucky  thirteen"  were  wel- 
comed into  the  organization.  The  climax  of  the  year's 
activities  was  the  annual  spring  banquet  at  which  the 
officers  for  the  new  year  were  announced. 


Mu  Chapter  has  contributed  to  education  by  main- 
taining a  small  loan  fund  to  assist  members  in  furthering 
their  professional  education.  Each  year  at  the  annual 
Honor  Day  Convocation,  KDP  also  presents  a  gold 
medal  to  the  sophomore  with  the  highest  honor  point 
average. 

The  society  was  led  by  the  most  competent  individuals 
as  follows:  President,  Marian  Dean;  vice-president,  Con- 
nie Thomassen;  secretary,  Esther  Heiniger;  and  treasurer, 
Rita  Kraus.  Their  sponsor  was  Dean  Emeritus  H.  H. 
Schroeder. 


109 


First  Row:  Proctor;  Underkoffler;  Pedrotti;  Molmberg;  Wade.  Second  Row:  Thomas;  Hauschild;  Palmer;  Shay;  Cross,  B.;  Dr.  Mills; 
Hultgren;  Cross,  K.  Third  Row:  Streid;  Neumann;  Atkinson;  Bishop;  Dr.  McCormick.  Fourth  Row:  Whitmore;  Kemnitz;  Borror;  Kraus; 
Miss    Flagg;    Curry.     Fifth   Row:    Longbrake;    Underkoffler,    M.;    Baker;  Dr.  Ullsvik;  Tyler;  Wolfe;  Gillen;  Norini;  Pedrotfi. 


KAPPA  Ml)  EPSILON 


Kappa  Mu  Epsilon,  national  honorary  mathematics 
fraternity,  introduced  a  full  schedule  of  programs  and 
activities  for  the  year. 

All  programs  included  discussions  concerning  business 
math,  math  in  dimensional  analysis,  mathematical  ma- 
chines, biological  mathematics,  and  statistics. 

Activities  for  the  year  were  headed  by  a  Homecom- 
ing   Breakfast,    followed    by    a    Christmas    party    at    the 


home  of  Dr.  McCormick.  The  final  event  of  the  year  was 
a  formal  initiation. 

Officers  were:  President  "Gauss,"  Rita  Kraus;  vice- 
president  "Pascal,"  William  Norini;  treasurer  "Napier," 
Milton  Underkoffler;  secretary  "Ashmes,"  Margaret 
Proctor;  corresponding  secretary  "Descartes,"  Dr.  C.  N. 
Mills;  and  sponsor,  Dr.  Clyde  McCormick. 


110 


Barstead;  Goetz;   Bell,   E.;   Bowers;  Palman;  Martin;   Paepke;   Peaco;  Smith,    A.;   Denier;    Hildebrand.     Back   Row:    Dr.    Cavanagh;   Trembacki; 
Camp;  Dean;  Paine;  Mrs.   Brunk;  Heiniger;  Rafferty;  Dr.   Marshall;  Miles;    Keefe;   Adkins;    Uhrig;    McCoy;   Wepprecht. 


PI  GAMMA  MU 


Illinois  Theta  Chapter  of  Pi  Gamma  Mu,  honorary 
social  science  group,  reached  a  record  enrollment  of 
forty-nine  members  this  year.  Social  activities  for  the 
year  included  an  initiation  of  new  members,  a  Christmas 
party,  and  a  spring  picnic.  The  other  four  meetings 
presented  discussions  based  upon  materials  of  the 
American  Foreign  Policy  Library.  In  the  early  part  of 
1947,  the  organization  conducted  a  series  of  open  meet- 
ings for  listening  and  discussion  in  Milner  Library  in 
connection     with     the     broadcast    of    "America's    Town 


Meeting  of  the  Air." 

Their  Homecoming  Banquet  in  November  was  given 
in  cooperation  with  Pi  Kappa  Delta,  the  honorary  speech 
fraternity,  at  the  Illinois  Hotel  in  Bloomington. 

The  officers  for  the  year  were:  Marjorie  Goetz,  presi- 
dent; Phyllis  K.  Hildebrand,  vice-president;  Harold  W. 
Paine,  secretary;  Julia  Lea  Martin,  treasurer;  Assistant 
Professor  Dorothy  G.  Brunk,  sponsor  and  correspond- 
ing secretary. 


Ill 


First   Row:    Petefish;    Edwards;   Miss   Nelson.     Standing:   Mr.    Holmes;   Jennings;   Craig;    Mr.    Barber;  Tucci. 


PI  KAPPA  DELTA 


The  ISNU  Eta  Chapter  of  Pi  Kappa  Delta,  founded  by 
Moses  Stelsen  as  sponsor,  was  the  first  teachers  college 
in  Illinois  to  become  a  member  of  this  National  Organi- 
zation. 

Activities  for  the  year  included  the  annual  ISNU 
Invitational  Debate  Tournament  with  about  forty  col- 
leges attending.  The  club  participated  in  Debate  and 
Speech  Tournaments  at  the  University  of  Iowa;  Eastern 


State  Teachers,  Charleston;  Southern  State  Illinois  Uni- 
versity, and  St.  Thomas  College  at  St.  Paul,  Minnesota. 
They  also  participated  in  the  State  Debate  Tournament 
and  the  Pi  Kappa  Delta  Province. 

The  active  members  are:  Mary  Etta  Edwards;  Iris 
Shreve;  Warren  Craig;  Mark  Tucci;  Betty  Jane  Petefish. 
The  faculty  sponsor  is  Professor  F.  L.  D.  Holmes. 


112 


First   Row:    Kiiskila;    Greening.     Second   Row:    Lockenvitz;   Dr.    Koepke;    Cowles;    Miss    Peters;    Miss    Day;    Lucero;    Miss    Jessa.     Third    Row: 
Ball;    Munson;    Dr.    Toll;    Gentes. 


PI  OMEGA  PI 


"Service,  Loyalty,  and  Progress,"  are  the  guiding 
lights  of  the  Business  Education  Fraternity,  Pi  Omega  Pi. 
One  has  only  to  look  at  the  2.2  averages  of  the  mem- 
bers to  find  proof  of  their  devotion  to  these  principles  in 
the  business  education  field.  Outstanding  activities  for 
the  year  were  the  tea  for  all  Business  Education  fresh- 
men and  the  club's  trip  to  Chicago  to  visit  the  Board 
of  Trade   and   various   large   department   stores. 


The  club  climaxed  their  year  of  service,  loyalty,  and 
progress  to  business  education  with  a  traditional  spring 
banquet. 

Reigning  for  the  year  were:  President,  Paloma  Lucero; 
vice-president,  Janice  Munson;  secretary,  Imogene 
Cowles;  treasurer,  Elmo  Gentes;  historian,  Phyllis  Locken- 
vitz; and  faculty  advisor,  Assistant  Professor  Margaret 
Peters. 


113 


Firsf    Row:    Broaderick;   Sharda.     Second   Row:  Copple;   Sevier;   Krause;    Cullinan;    Stenderup;    Pulaski;    McDaniels;    and    Dr.    Hiett. 


SIGMA  TAU  DELTA 


To  foster  creative  writing  is  the  chief  purpose  of  Sigma 
Tau   Delta,   national   honorary   English   fraternity. 

The  activities  for  the  year  included  a  Homecoming 
breakfast,  caroling,  Shakespeare's  birthday  party,  and 
the   annual  spring   banquet. 

The  Vidette  and  The  Rectangle,  national  fraternity 
magazine,  receive  literary  contributions  from  these  stu- 
dents. 


Dr.  Robert  Brigham,  whose  topic  was  "The  Essence 
of  Poetry,"  was  one  of  the  guest  speakers. 

Officers  were:  President,  Barbara  Sevier;  vice-presi- 
dent, Lucille  Copple;  secretary,  Connie  Thomassen;  treas- 
urer, Charlotte  Broaderick;  literary  editor,  Jean  Sharda; 
and  faculty  sponsor,   Professor  Herbert  Hiett. 


114 


First  Row:  Tinette;  Proctor.    Second  Row:  Atkinson;  Johnson;  Mary  Ann;    Larson;    Calvin;    Small;    Webber.     Third    Row:    Miss    Mabel    Clare 
Allen,-  Uhrig;   Blake;   Parrett;  Tipler;   Yates;   Edwards. 


THETA  ALPHA  PHI 


A  business  meeting  and  a  light  buffet  supper  make 
up  the  informal  meetings  of  the  Theta  Alpha  Phi.  It  is 
a  gathering  where  the  members  and  sponsor  can  get 
together  and  have  fun. 

Monthly  meetings  are  held  at  different  houses  with 
different    hosts    and    hostesses.     Initiations    are    held    in 


December  and  May.  Miss  Mabel  Clare  Allen  held  open 
house  for  the  alumni  at  this  year's  Homecoming.  The 
club   sponsors   commencement   plays. 

Presiding  over  the  group  were  Hope  Norton,  presi- 
dent; Bill  Tipler,  vice-president;  Betty  Jo  Blake,  secre- 
tary-treasurer; and  Dr.  Mabel  Clare  Allen,  sponsor. 


115 


SPECIAL  ORGANIZATIONS 


First  Row:  Metz;  Gentes;  Morino;  Weidmeyer;  Rozum;  Keefe.  Second  Row:  Adams;  Barber;  Popejoy;  Hull;  Popejoy;  Adkins;  Carey.  Third 
Row:  Genfes;  Prebeck;  Baker;  Tattiste;  Fields.  Standing:  Osborn;  Davis;  Strong;  Norton;  Abbott;  Uhrig;  Anderson.  Fourth  Row  (seated) 
Schneeberg;    Teel;    Tribe;    Rhodus;   Tully. 


BLACKFRIARS 


Since  "all  work  and  no  play  makes  Jack  a  dull  boy," 
the  Blackfriars  have  presented  various  skits  and  pro- 
grams to  entertain  and  stimulate  the  students. 

The  purpose  of  the  Blackfriars  is  to  promote  interest 
in  drama,  and  to  encourage  fraternal  feeling  and  co- 
operation among  the  members  of  the  organization. 

The  first  show  written  and  produced  by  Blackfriars 
was  "My  Old  Man"  in  1934.  Other  plays  following 
were  "S'  Funny  Thing,"  "We  Want  Men,"  "What's  the 


Use,"   and    "Politics   Anonymous." 

This  year's  Blackfriar  show  played  to  capacity  audi- 
ences in  a  two-night  stand.  Combining  hilarious  comedy 
and  original  music  composed  by  Blackfriars'  own,  the 
show  satirized  very  effectively  campus  doin's. 

The  officers  were:  Charles  Porter,  abbott;  Murray  Os- 
born, prior;  Lyman  Smith,  scribe;  Calvin  Teel,  purser; 
Associate  Professor  Dale  Vetter,  Sponsor. 


116 


First    Row:    Ferry;    Hartel;    McKibbin;    Bernasek;    Musick;    Harris.     Second   Row:    Miss    McAvoy;   Morsch;    Pirka;   Father    F.    H.   O.    Bowman;   Gallo- 
way;   Brattrud;  and    Hall. 


CANTERBURY  CLUB 


"Christian  Students'  Obligations  in  Modern  Society" 
was  the  theme  of  the  Canterbury  Club  this  year.  At 
each  meeting  certain  phases  of  this  topic  were  discussed 
either  by  a   speaker  or  in   a   round-table  discussion. 

The  individual  aim  of  every  member  was  to  begin  to 


know  the  Episcopal  Church  better,  and  also  how  to  get 
along  with  other  Christians. 

Officers  were:  President,  Betty  Jane  Hall;  secretary, 
Audrey  Hartel;  treasurer,  Patricia  Ferry;  Sponsor,  Asso- 
ciate Professor  Blanche  McAvoy. 


117 


First    Row:    Austin;    Budd;    Hall;    Hartel;    Hauge.     Second    Row:    Dean    Keaton;     Ritchie;    Mufley;    Miss    Cavanagh.    Third    Row:    Watkins;    Wade. 
Fourth    Row:    Mrs.    Keaton;    Jenne;    Gustatson;    Masten;    and    Ashcraft. 


COLLEGE  LEAGUE  OF  WOMEN  VOTERS 


Students  of  today  are  the  citizens  of  tomorrow.  This 
age-old  thought  has  been  well  acted  upon  by  the  Col- 
lege League  of  Women  Voters,  which  is  the  Citizen- 
ship Committee  of  Women's  League. 

The  program  this  year,  planned  by  Charlotte  Hauge 
and  her  committee,  began  with  a  Welcome  Tea  for  all 
new  members  on  campus.  A  trip  to  the  Bloomington 
Court  was  one  of  the  outstanding   events.     It  was  pre- 


ceded by  a  number  of  lectures  on  the  how,  why,  when, 
and  where  of  voting.  The  annual  Christmas  party  and 
also  the  Spring  Picnic  were  held  at  Dean  Keaton's  home. 
The  officers  for  the  year  were:  President,  Jane  Jenne; 
vice-president,  Betty  Wade;  secretary-treasurer,  Betty 
Jane  Hall;  social  chairman,  Ellen  Budd;  publicity,  Lor- 
raine Muffley;  program,  Charlottle  Hauge;  and  the  spon- 
sor was  Assistant  Professor  Helen  M.  Cavanagh. 


110 


On    the    Floor:    Stueber;    Reeser;    Broaderick.     Sitting:    Dickenson;    Grossart;   Reinhart;  Copple;  Sumner;  Grieder;  Jacobs;  Jones,  Hoyden.     Stand- 
ing:   Wilson;    Bennett;    Smith;    Rust;    Lighthall;    Krause;   Hahn. 


FELL  HALL  HONOR  RESIDENTS 


From  the  time  that  freshmen  girls  arrive  at  Fell  Hall, 
the  only  freshman  women's  dormitory  at  ISNU,  they 
begin  to  feel  the  friendly  atmosphere  which  surrounds 
this  residence  consisting  of  152  women. 

As  the  year  rolls  on,  the  girls  become  better  ac- 
quainted by  means  of  the  social  events  which  the  hall 
sponsors.  These  include  pajama  parties,  special  dinners 
and   the  formal. 


This  year  the  director  of  the  Hall,  Miss  Freida  Grieder, 
who  is  also  Assistant  Dean  of  Women,  and  nineteen 
upper  class  women,  known  as  Honor  Residents,  guided 
and  counseled  the  new  girls. 

The  officers  for  the  year  were:  Charlotte  Bennett, 
president;  Wanda  M.  Jones,  treasurer;  and  Shirlee  Wil- 
son, secretary. 


119 


Sprecker;    Warring;    Pedley;    Wells;    Tinette;    Knight;    Karloski;    and    Proctor. 


FUTURE  TEACHERS  OF  AMERICA 


It  has  been  said  that  the  Future  Teachers  of  America 
organization  is  a  practice  school  for  training  leaders. 
This  statement  has  been  verified  by  its  various  activities. 

Although  this  organization  just  celebrated  its  first 
birthday  in  October  of  1947,  it  has  organized  FTA  clubs 
in  many  high  schools.  It  also  helped  sponsor  National 
Education  Week  in  Bloomington-Normal  and  held  panel 
discussions    in    surrounding    high    schools.     Some   of  the 


members    acted    as    Sunday    school    teachers    during    the 
past  year. 

Leaders  of  the  group  were:  President,  Margaret  Proc- 
tor; secretary,  Dorothy  Shay;  treasurer,  Jean  Warring; 
librarian,  Pauline  Bury;  historian,  Mildred  Thompson; 
publicity,  Louise  Krause;  song  leader,  Doris  Tinette. 
Sponsors  were  Assistant  Dean  Arthur  H.  Larsen,  and 
Assistant  Professor  Ruth  Huggins. 


120 


Row  One:  Cottrell;  Wells;  Appenbrink;  J.  Corn;  C.  Lucas;  Ort.  Row  Two:  Held;  Carlson;  Steele;  Hertz;  V.  Lucas;  Bratton;  B.  Corn;  Say- 
lor;  HufFington.  Row  Three:  Adams;  Peteflsh;  Martinie;  Barz;  Jensen;  Headley;  Harner;  Skau;  Cornelius;  Bussert.  Standing:  Knight,  Shreve; 
Brayton;  Abell;  Shay;  Lawson;  Smith;  Judy;  Baker;  Wilson;  Frederick;  Miles;  Pedigo;  Sancken;  Hogle;  Morrison;  Clark;  Denzer;  Ekin ;  Dean; 
Schlosser;  de  WerfT;   Keeney;   Bury. 


WESLEY  FOUNDATION 


"We  would  be  building"  is  the  credo  of  the  students 
participating  in  the  activities  of  Wesley  Foundation,  the 
crganization  supported  by  the  Methodist  Churches  of 
Illinois  for  Methodist  students  at  ISNU.  By  providing 
students  with  a  weekly  program  of  activities  in  an  atmos- 
phere of  Christian  fellowship,  the  Foundation  strives  to 
enrich  their  lives  and  contribute  to  their  growth,  both 
spiritually  and  socially. 

Sunday  morning  college  class  and  the  evening  fellow- 
ship supper  and  vespers,  Tuesday   "pop-in   tea,"  Wed- 


nesday sacrifice  supper,  Friday  fun  night,  a  weekly 
newspaper,  and  two  fellowship  groups  all  add  up  to 
give  ISNU  students  participating  in  Foundation  activities 
the  opportunity  to  lead  more  purposeful  lives  through 
service  to  God  and   man. 

W.  F.  is  more  than  just  a  club;  it  is  a  group  which 
seeks  to  further  the  ideals  of  Jesus  in  the  lives  of  stu- 
dents and  to  aid  them  in  forming  a  deep  and  workable 
philosophy  of  life  and  an  awareness  of  the  needs  and 
rights  of  others. 


121 


First   Row:    Miss    Nelson;   Dr.    Loeck;   Mitchell;    Hauge;   Albers;   Nortrup.    Second  Row:  Huelsmann;  Pletcher;  Britton ;  Norton;  Beckley;  Shotick; 
and    Howell. 


HIERONYMUS 


"Every  member  a  worker,"  is  the  motto  of  the  Hieron- 
ymus  club,  made  up  of  students  who  have  a  sincere 
interest  in  rural  communities  and  the  scholastic  average 
required  for  membership.  Founded  by  a  graduate  of 
ISNU,  Dr.  Hieronymus,  in  1922,  the  club  is  dedicated 
to  the  promotion  of  better  living  in  small  communities. 
The  activities  for  the  year  included  a  series  of  talks  on 
home  and  community   living.     In  October,   the  club  was 


host  to  the  National  Rural  Youth  Conference  held  at 
East  Bay  Camp.  The  year's  activities  were  terminated 
with  the  annual  spring  picnic. 

The  officers  for  the  year  were:  Kathryn  Masten,  presi- 
dent; Hope  Norton,  vice-president;  Alta  Nortrup,  secre- 
tary; Charlotte  Hauge,  treasurer  and  program  chairman; 
and   Dr.  W.   R.   Lueck,   sponsor. 


122 


Wilson;   Healy;    Bates;   Blake,    Betty;   Clark;   Kitchell;    McNeil. 


HOME  MANAGEMENT  HOUSE 


Home  Management  House  —  Yes,  the  home  eco- 
nomics majors  make  it  their  home  and  therefore  manage 
the  Jesse  E.  Rambo  House  for  nine  weeks  during  their 
senior  year  at  ISNU. 

"We  had  so  much  fun  at  a  party  at  the  Home 
Management  House"  are  words  that  are  frequently 
heard  on  campus  after  a  party  is  given  for  fellow  stu- 
dents. The  girls  also  get  to  know  their  favorite  university 
professors  better  at  the  dinner  parties,  for  entertainment 
problems  play  an  important  role  in  the  life  of  these 
girls.  The  Home  Management  House  is  not  all  a  life 
of  entertainment  problems.  There  is  the  budgeting,  keep- 
ing  accounts,   marketing,   washing  Venetian   blinds,  and 


many  other  duties,  all  of  which  are  supervised  by  the 
resident  director,  Miss  Frances  Conkey. 

This  year  the  Home  Management  House  has  been 
completely  redecorated  much  to  the  satisfaction  and 
pleasure  of  the  entire  Home  Economics  department.  This 
is  the  first  time  it  has  been  completely  done  over  since 
it  was  built  in  1939. 

The  Home  Management  House  is  really  two  houses  in 
one;  it  has  the  traditional  side  and  a  modern  side.  The 
girls  living  at  the  house  spend  about  four  and  a  half 
weeks  on  either  side.  The  two  houses  are  connected  by 
the  director's  apartment  which  is  located  in  the  middle 
of  the  second  floor. 


123 


Standing:    Hodel.     First    Row:    Hassen;    Lucas;    Edwards;    Goudreau;    Proctor.    Second  Row:   Roberts;  Jenne;  Dawson;  Reeser;  Grossart;  Mills. 
Third   Row:  McBride;  Ward;   Bennett;   Hewitt;  Dean    Keaton. 


WOMEN'S  LEAGUE 


Frc;r.  the  day  you  ore  taken  on  a  icur  of  the  campus 
during  Freshman  week  to  the  last  WL  Formal  in  your 
senior  year,  Women's  League  members  are  on  hand  to 
be  of  help  to  you  and  in  so  doing  to  make  college  life 
a  more  valuable  experience  for  themselves. 

Upon  registration,  all  women  on  campus  are  eligible 
to  become  active  members. 

The  three  main  boards  governing  Women's  League 
are  the  Executive  Board,  the  Central  Board,  and  the 
House   Presidents'   Board. 


Christmas  Meditations,  Big  Four  Dances,  Dad's  Day, 
Mother's  Day,  Campus  Guides  for  Freshmen  Week,  and 
Campus  Cues  are  some  of  the  activities  that  were  done 
in  conjunction  with  the  University  Club.  The  Annual 
Indoor  Carnival  was  put  on  by  the  Central  Board. 
Proceeds  were  sent  to  a  charity  fund. 

Marjorie  Hodel  served  as  president,  Connie  Goudreau 
as  vice-president,  Mary  Etta  Edwards  as  secretary,  and 
Joyce  Boussum  as  treasurer. 


124 


Standing:  Atkinson.     Firsi  Row:   Miller;  Johnson;   Ruth;  Teer;   Mitchell;    Johnson,    Frieda;    Paine.     Second   Row:   Thomas;    Genson;    Gengler; 
Barz;    Harrison.      Third    Row:     Dean;    Williams;    Hildebrand;    Crowell;   Miss    Force;   Galloway;   and    Beattie. 


INTER-CULTURAL  CLUB 


The  Inter-Cultural  Club  is  one  of  the  newer  organiza- 
tions on  the  ISNU  campus.  It  was  founded  to  further 
a  better  understanding  between  groups  of  different 
racial  heritage  through  studying  together,  working 
together  on  various  projects,  and  participating  in  forum 
and  panel  discussions. 

Among   the   activities   of  the  club   this   year  was   the 


sponsoring  of  a  speaker  on  the  Bloomington-Normal 
Forum.  The  speaker  was  Carey  McWilliams,  who  is  an 
authority  on  racial  minorities,  a  lecturer,  and  an  author. 
Officers  for  the  year  were:  Phyllis  Hildebrand,  presi- 
dent; Vivian  Teer,  vice-president;  Freda  Johnson,  secre- 
tary-treasurer;  and   Miss  Thelma   Force,  sponsor. 


125 


Webber;  Racobs;  Brown,  Nancy;  Johnson,  Marianne;  Blue.  Second  Row:  Guither;  Alverson;  Martin;  Opperman;  Hirtman;  Gallagher; 
Mapes.  Third  Row:  Lancaster;  Tinette;  Proctor;  Boussom;  Cross;  Parret.  Standing:  Camp;  Ewing;  Craig;  Cretcher;  Bankert;  Lisowski; 
Francis;   Small;   Murray;    Bill;  Maxwell. 


JESTERS 


The  Jesters  have  the  theater  to  hold  them  together, 
since  membership  is  open  only  to  those  who  have 
worked  on  University  Theater  productions. 

This  year  they  entered  the  motion  picture  field  by  film- 
ing a  modernized  version  of  the  story  of  Bluebeard.  The 
film  was  shown  at  the  first  initiation  of  the  year  and  at 
the  Women's  League  Carnival.  "The  Barrett's  of  Wim- 
pole  Street"  was  produced  and  presented  in  December. 


The  Jesters  assembly  program  in  the  spring  was  one  of 
the  most  interesting  of  the  year.  The  Jesters  also  par- 
ticipated in  various  other  dramatic  activities  on  campus. 
The  officers  are  Kenneth  Camp,  president;  Warren 
Craig,  vice-president;  Marianne  Johnson,  secretary; 
Margaret  Proctor,  treasurer;  Ruth  Yates,  Margaret  Parret, 
sponsors. 


126 


First  Row:  unidentified;  unidentified;  Paulsen;  unidentified;  Hudak.  Second  Row:  Ahrens;  S.  Smith;  Jenne;  Larson;  Ahlers;  Lundberg;  Mueller; 
Tinette.  Third  Row:  Behrens;  K.  Hudak;  Bakker;  unidentified;  Lang;  unidentified;  Malmstead;  Lundberg;  Spiegel;  Kampwerth;  Shotick;  Uhrig. 
Fourth  Row:  Waterstreet;  DeVrees;  Weber;  Ries;  Klitzing;  Freedlund;  Goetze;  unidentified;  unidentified;  F.  Spiegel;  Zillman.  Fifth  Row: 
Dr.    Ullsvik;    Rev.    Nelson;    Peterson;    Hemkin;    Drinkhaus;    Rev.    Weller;  Turnquist;  Schmoll;  Meyer;  Schmidt;  Kemnitz. 


LUTHERAN 


The  monthly  meetings  of  the  Lutheran  Club,  which 
were  open  to  any  of  the  students  on  campus,  were  held 
in  the  White  Room  of  Old  Main.  "We  Believe"  was  the 
topic  under  discussion  at  the  business  meetings. 

During  the  Lenten  season,  the  club  held  Lenten  devo- 
tions each  Wednesday  evening.  Through  the  year,  the 
club  sponsored  a  Bible  Class  every  Sunday  morning  for 
anyone  wishing   to  attend.     Jane  Jenne  was  in  charge 


of  these  classes. 

The  club  participated  in  the  following  social  affairs 
during  the  year:  Annual  Homecoming  Breakfast,  Christ- 
mas  Party,   Annual   Spring   Picnic,   and   Spring    Banquet. 

The  officers  for  the  year  were.-  Jack  Uhrig,  president; 
William  Kemnitz,  vice-president;  Joan  Hemken,  secre- 
tary; Marjorie  Paulsen,  treasurer;  Dr.  Bjarne  Ullsvik, 
sponsor. 


127 


First  Row:  Tracy;  Reifsteck;  Berger;  Baxter;  Judy;  Hughes;  Neuswanger.  Second  Row:  Meyers;  Apland;  Sinn;  unidentified;  Lowe;  unidentified; 
Summers.  Third  Row:  Mr.  Hudelson;  Bowdian;  Mr.  Popp;  Head;  E.  Hughes;  Benson;  Harner;  Mackey;  Fredericks;  Eickert;  Johnson;  Lovins; 
Mutch.     Standing:    Parmele;    McDonald;   Deters;  Sanders;    Zimmerman;    Purdue;    Lawson;   Strand;  Magers;  McVickar;   Hudson;  Holzhauer. 


MAIZE  GRANGE 


Maize  Grange,  a  local  chapter  of  the  National 
Grange,  was  organized  for  people  interested  in  agri- 
culture and  in  rural  activities.  No  scholastic  or  curricular 
restrictions  are  placed  on  students  who  desire  to  be 
members.  A  regular  ritual  is  conformed  with  at  every 
meeting,  followed  by  a  social  program.  Non-business 
activities  for  the  year  included  a  box  social,  movies, 
speeches,  and  the  annual  Barn  Dance  held  at  the 
University    Farm.    The    club    was    broken    up    during    the 


war,  but  this  year,  the  second  since  its  re-organization, 
they  had  a  record  enrollment  of  125  students. 

The  officers  for  the  year  were:  C.  Ursel  Parmele, 
master;  Tony  Deters,  overseer;  Kenneth  Zimmerman, 
assistant  steward;  June  Dickson,  assistant  stewardess; 
Shirley  Jacobs,  secretary;  Paul  Head,  treasurer;  Leland 
Hughes,  Chaplain;  James  Stroud,  steward;  Robert  Pur- 
due, gatekeeper;  Associate  Professor  Clyde  Hudelson, 
Sponsor. 


128 


Row    One:   Brady;   Kuethe;   Lockhart.     Row   Two:   Madrick;   DeLuka;  Jacobucci;    Gilmore;    Rockenbach.     Row    Three:    Hancock;   Tucci;   Haughey; 
Caruso;   Harris. 


NCLUB 


The  purposes  of  the  N  club  are  to  foster  athletics 
and  to  encourage  good  sportsmanship  among  athletes 
and  students.  Lettermen  set  the  example  toward  these 
goals. 

The  varsity  lettermen  on  campus  are  all  eligible  to 
become  members  of  the  N  club. 

The  activities  of  the  year  consisted  of  successfully 
choosing    a    queen   for   the    Homecoming   festivities   and 


running  the  cold  drink  and  candy  concessions  at  the 
home  football  games. 

Preliminary  measures  are  also  being  formulated  to 
establish  an  athletic  "loan  fund"  in  order  to  help  meet 
the   needs  of  lettermen   attending  school. 

President,  Robert  Trumpy;  vice-president,  Spencer  Gil- 
more;  secretary-treasurer,  Larry  Hoerer;  sponsor,  Howard 
J.  Hancock. 


29 


Row  One:  Paoli;  J.  McDonald;  Paynic;  Radka;  Elliott;  Batastini;  and  McCormick.  Row  Two:  Soeldner;  Vranicar;  Mancuso;  K.  Lyons;  Langan; 
M.  Lyons;  Kimek;  Fleming;  Hallam;  Code;  Sullivan.  Row  Three:  Malott;  Alblinger;  M.  Lyons;  Broderick;  Cullman;  Plese;  Fagetti;  Tofil;  Miss 
Regina  Connell.  Merged  in  Background:  Pefferman;  Junis;  Jacobs;  Anich;  Riley;  Gengler;  Pheifer;  Egges;  Carey;  J.  Fagetti;  Kime;  S.  Tofil 
Becker;  Schmid;  Larson;  Mackessy;  Feeney;  Coy;  Fenton;  Halloran;  Cabelek;  Drda;  Moore;  Fallon;  Gillen;  Kaine;  Reidy;  Longnecker;  Walters 
Cox;  Siehl;  Scully;  McBain;  Devine;  Zimmerman;  Marchetti;  Bagby;  Reidman;  Kapraun;  Henkle;  Becker;  Pemberton;  Harrison;  D.  Bagby;  Deters 
Anderson;    Lisowski;    Ebert;    McDonald. 


NEWMAN 


The  Newman  Club,  a  religious  organization  for  all 
Catholics  on  the  campus,  has  as  its  primary  purpose  the 
deepening  of  the  spiritual  and  the  enrichening  of  the 
temporal  lives  of  its  members  through  a  balanced  pro- 
gram of  religious,  intellectual,  and  social  activities.  The 
regular  monthly  meetings  held  in  the  Holy  Trinity  Club 
Room  include  a  variety  of  programs  such  as  panel  dis- 
cussions, religious  quizzes,  question  boxes  on  current 
problems  of  a  religious  nature,  and  talks  by  both  stu- 
dents and  off-campus  speakers.  Social  affairs  include  a 
freshmen  initiation,  card  party,  Christmas  party,  and  the 


May  Day  banquet.  The  club  has  started  a  valuable 
project  by  building  a  library  of  Catholic  books  and 
pamphlets  for  the  use  of  all  on  the  campus.  Enrollment 
for  the  year  was  approximately  two  hundred. 

The  officers  for  the  year  were  Charles  Paoli,  presi- 
dent; John  Gillen,  vice-president;  Marilyn  Plese,  secre- 
tary; Margaret  Carey,  treasurer;  Ted  Lisowski,  member- 
ship; James  McDonald,  publicity;  Marjorie  Cox,  social; 
Margaret  Mackessy,  librarian;  Miss  Regina  Connell,  fac- 
ulty advisor;  The  Rev.  J.  E.  Lohan,  chaplain. 


130 


Standing:    Brower;    Blake;    Dismeier;    Young;    Bradley;    Hilemon;    Heeschen.      On    Knees:     Ray;    Maile;    Galloway;    Anich;     Parker;    Mapes; 
Johanns;    Rust;    Plese;   Wilson;   Olsen.     Sitting:    Cairns;    Steele;    Weathers;    Fager;   Meyer;   and    Brown. 


ORCHESIS 


Every  Monday  night  one  can  see  the  shining  lights  at 
the  gym  beckoning  all  girls  on  campus  to  the  Orchesis 
meeting.  The  purpose  of  Orchesis  is  to  give  an  oppor- 
tunity to  girls  to  participate  in  modern  dance  techniques 
and  compositions.  The  girls  learn  various  types  of  move- 
ment—  the  leaps,  walks,  runs,  skips,  swings,  and  falls, 
as  well   as  percussive  and   sustained   movement. 

In    October,    the    club   won    first    prize    in    the   Home- 


coming parade  with  their  theme  "Victory  Offering  for 
ISNU."  Other  activities  for  the  year  included  a  dance 
symposium  at  the  University  of  Illinois  and  a  dance 
recital  at  the  ISNU  assembly. 

The  officers  for  the  year  were:  Elizabeth  Heeschen, 
president;  Doris  Dismeier,  vice-president;  Marilyn  Plese, 
secretary-treasurer;  Associate  Professor  Miriam  Gray, 
sponsor. 


131 


First  Row:  Hewitt;  Jacobs;  unidentified;  unidentified;  unidentified;  Hoerrmann;  Schroeder;  Lyons;  Bess.  Second  Row:  Oilman;  Scott;  Sullivan; 
Jones;  Wilson;  Condit;  Bakker;  Garretson;  Dyroff;  unidentified;  Guth;  Rowlings;  Dickey;  Burr;  Aldridge.  Third  Row:  Gilmore;  unidentified; 
Carter;    Darr;    Bagby;    Lichty;    unidentified. 


PHILADELPHIA  LITERARY  SOCIETY 


The  strains  from  the  Philadelphia  song  —  "Here's  to 
dear  old  Phil  going  on  —  Here's  to  the  victory  it's  as 
certain  as  can  be,"  best  express  the  spirit  of  the  organi- 
zation. The  Society  is  the  oldest  organization  on 
campus,   being  formed  in   1  867. 

The  organization  combined  their  Hallowe'en  party 
with  a  formal  initiation  complete  with  candlelight  and 
script.    Other  social  activities  included  a  Christmas  party 


and  the  annual  Phil-Wright  contest. 

The  Phil's  and  Wright's  unite  once  each  year  at  their 
annual  spring  banquet.  Each  club  presents  a  program. 
The  parting  farewell  is  given  with  the  annual  spring 
picnic. 

The  officers  for  the  year  were:  Neal  Glenn,  faculty 
sponsor;  Shirley  Jacobs,  president;  Norma  Hewitt,  vice- 
president;  Jane  Busch,  secretary;  Alice  Dickey,  treasurer. 


132 


Fields;    Peaco;   Corradetti;    D'Agostina 


SMITH  HALL 


Fifty-three  men  spend  4  years  in  a  fraternal-like 
atmosphere  at  Smith  Hall,  one  of  the  two  dormitories  on 
campus.  It  stimulates  social  activities  for  its  residents, 
in  addition  to  encouraging  wholesome  participation  in 
and  support  of  school  activities. 

The  activities  of  the  Hall  are  carried  on  with  the  ad- 
vice   and    assistance    of    Dean    R.    H.    Linkins    and    Mrs. 


Corwin  Cruikshank,  housemother.  Two  of  its  main  social 
activities  are  the  Christmas  Formal  and  the  Spring 
Formal.  In  addition,  all-school  dances  are  sponsored 
by  the  men  of  the  Hall. 

The  officers  were:  Harmon  Peaco,  president;  Edwin 
Fields,  vice-president;  Frank  D'Agostino,  treasurer;  John 
Corradetti,  secretary. 


133 


***** 


Galvin;    Dorsey;    Bowers.      Standing:    Vegna;    Wells;    Small;    and    Dean    Linkins. 


UNIVERSITY  CLUB 


The  University  Club  is  an  all-men's  organization  which 
has  all  the  men  on  campus  as  its  members. 

To  provide  for  the  broad  social  welfare  and  fraternal 
fellowship  among  the  members,  to  assist  in  making  the 
school  spirit  of  the  campus  the  most  worthy  for  the 
entire  student  body,  to  co-operate  with  the  organiza- 
tions of  the  campus  in  promoting  all  worthy  activities, 
and  to  co-operate  with  the  University  administration  in 
carrying  out  its  policies  is  the  four-fold  purpose  of  the 
University  Club. 

Dad's  Day,  Parent's  Day,  and  the  Big  Four  Dancss 
are   activities   that  the  University  Club  sponsors  in  con- 


junction with  the  Women's  League.  Alone,  the  Uni- 
versity Club  directs  the  Christmas  Program,  All-School 
Dances,  doughnut  and  coffee  concessions  at  Homecom- 
ing and  the  annual  Stunt  Show. 

The  officers  of  the  University  Club  are  Richard  Dorsey, 
president;  Robert  Galvin,  vice-president;  Robert  Bowers, 
secretary;  Edward  Wells,  treasurer. 

Committee  Chairmen  are  Paul  Vegna,  social;  James 
Rafferty,  Richard  Murphy,  big  four;  Robert  Small,  pro- 
gram; Martin  Stephenson,  Christmas  program. 

The  University  Club  is  sponsored  by  Dean  R.  H.  Lin- 
kins. 


134 


Davis;    Wilson,   Delia;    Dr.    Hoffman;   Frink;    Kempel.     Standing:    Berry;     Cairns;     Grossart;     Kneer;    Wilson,     Mary     Lou;     Hoelting;    Schultz, 
Marie;  Smith,   Lois;  and   Beven. 


WRA 


Many  girls  find  relaxation,  friendly  competition,  and 
opportunity  to  meet  many  other  students  besides  having 
loads  of  fun   by  participation  in  WRA  activities. 

WRA  is  a  versatile  organization  striving  to  promote 
fellowship  and  recreation  for  all  women  on  campus. 

Throughout  the  year,  it  is  responsible  for  the  women's 
athletic  events  which  include  an  extensive  intramural 
program,  play  nights,  parties,  outings,  and  camping 
trips.     Other   activities   backed   by   the  executive   board, 


which  is  composed  of  representatives  from  each  class, 
are  the  annual  get-together  luncheon  at  Homecoming; 
play  days,  and  the  formal  banquet  and  installation  of 
new  officers  each  May. 

Officers  were  Delia  Wilson,  president;  Melba  Jean 
Zehr  Frink,  vice-president;  Jean  Kempel,  secretary; 
Rosemary  Davis,  treasurer;  Dr.  Frances  P.  Hoffman, 
sponsor. 


135 


Seated,  Row  One:  Kudelas;  Lisowski;  Hanssen;  Findley.  Row  Two:  Williams;  Sherbert;  Coy;  Dickenson;  Ballard.  Row  Three:  Not  iden- 
tified; Smith;  Borror;  Sunnesen.  Row  Four:  Not  identified;  Logan;  Summer.  Standing:  Lucero;  Mr.  Charles  Harper;  Berwanger;  Meeter; 
Klimek;   and    Bennett. 


WRIGHTONIA 


Sing  for  Wrightcnia 
Sing  for  what  is  right 
Working  and  striving  to 

keep  our  banner  bright. 
So   then   come  let  us   sing   right 
And   make  it  ring  right 
Boosting    Wrightonia. 


The  annual  Phil-Wright  contest  was  the  highlight  of 
the  year.  The  rival  organizations  have  contestants  in 
debate,  vocal  solo,  piano  solo,  extempore  speaking, 
dramatic  reading,  and  oration.  Judges  from  other  col- 
leges were  called  in  to  judge  the  events. 


The  officers  for  the  year  were:  Paloma  Lucero,  presi- 
dent; Ted  Lisowski,  vice-president;  Delores  Heusen, 
secretary;  Bob  Hull,  treasurer;  Lois  Smith,  publicity; 
Associate   Professor  Charles   A.   Harper,   sponsor. 


136 


Front  Row:  Held;  Ranz;  Johnson,  Freda;  Jones,  Shirley;  Willis;  Weathers;  Lucas;  Shaw;  Simpson.  Second  Row:  Hogle;  Whitten;  Johnson, 
Elaine;  Gustafson;  Watson;  Masten;  Oilman;  McDavitt;  Mrs.  Turner.  Third  Row:  Price;  Johnson,  Ruth;  Lober;  Corn;  Bratton;  Nugent; 
Smith,  Evelyn;  Stanley;  Shay;  Ritchie;   Davy;  and   Williams,  Mary. 


YWCA 


The  YWCA  celebrated  its  diamond  anniversary  this 
year  with  an  all-day  program  beginning  with  a  medi- 
tation service  in  the  White  Room.  Other  events  through- 
out the  day  included  the  anniversary  luncheon,  the 
recognition  service,  and  the  evening  program  to  which 
the  public  was  invited.  Besides  representatives  from 
eight  states,  Mr.   Karl  McMurry,   the  son   of  Lida   Brown 


McMurry,    the   founder,    was    present. 

The  get-acquainted  tea,  the  "mum"  sale  at  Home- 
coming, and  the  white  gift  Christmas  service  are 
other  activities  that  took  place  during  the  year.  The 
organization  was  run  by  Donna  Racobs,  president; 
Irene  Guither,  vice-president;  Vivienne  Lucas,  secretary; 
and    Jean   Hogle,   treasurer. 


137 


MUSIC 


CONCERT    BAND    AND    BRASS    ENSEMBLE 


CONCERT    ORCHESTRA 


138 


MEN'S    GLEE   CLUB 


~-~~" 

i 

B**,*!r**"^,  *s»  si 

"'"" i     fi'1^^'  ft§     'Cf  ' 

*  T.;jtouim 

r»f  **s  1 

f 

■llflMaai 

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WOMEN'S    CHORUS 


139 


PEP  BAND 


UNIVERSITY   CHORUS 


140 


141 


First  Semester  Staff 

Gentes;    Rafaelle;   Antoine;   Nolan;   Sharda;   McDaniels;   DeLuka;    Wilson,    J.;    Ambrose.      Standing:    Phillips;     Barz;    Adkins; 
Schultze;    Mackessy;   Gumbrell;   Carter;    Purkey;   Bacopolous;   DsClark;  Schilling;  Sunnesen;  Johnson;  Wilson,  D. 


THE 


VIDETTE 


Jean  Sharda,  Editor-in-Chief 
First  Semester 


Ernest    Purkey,    Editor-in-Chief 
Second  Semester 


"A  weekly  publication  dedicated  to  the  interests  of 
university  students"  is  the  way  the  Vidette  describes 
itself  under  its   name   plate. 

Its  more  immediate  goals  are:  One — to  provide  ade- 
quate news  coverage,  Two — to  promote  the  welfare  of 
ISNU  students,  Three — to  educate,  and  Four — to  enter- 
tain. 

Vidette  dummy  layouts  are  made  up  every  Monday 
night.  The  paper  is  printed  on  Tuesday  and  distributed 
to  the  students  on  Wednesday.  Regular  Staff  meetings, 
at  which  all  the  editors  meet  to  plan  future  issues,  are 
held  every  Monday  night. 


Jean  Sharda,  Editor-in-Chief  of  The  Vidette  during 
the  first  semester  of  1947-48,  was  succeeded  by  Ernest 
Purkey  for  the  second  semester. 

Other  members  of  the  staff  include  the  following: 
Ruth  Nolan,  associate  editor,-  Tom  Gumbrell,  managing 
editor;  James  Valesano,  news  editor;  Betty  McDaniels, 
feature  editor;  Don  Adkins,  sports  editor;  Alfred  Schill- 
ing, business  manager;  Joe  French  and  Rod  Abbot,  ad- 
vertising managers;  Eileen  Sunnessen,  exchange  editor; 
William    DeClark,   faculty  sponsor. 


142 


Staff    hord    at   work   on    Monday    night 


EDITORIAL 
STAFF 


Gumbrell;   Nolan;    Purkey;    Adkins 


Photographer  Murray 


Every  Wednesday! 


143 


ATHLETICS 


144 


Howard    J.    Hancock,    Director   of   Athletics 


THE  VINDICATION  OF  BLOODY  JOE 


When  nights  were  cold  and  winds  blew  bold 
Around  McCormick  Hall, 
Two  teams,  enraged,  a  battle  waged 
For  fame  and  basketball. 

Though  Normal  fans  rose  from  the  stands 
And  shrieked,   "Fie  on  the  foe!" 
The  halftime  score  looked  hopeless  for 
The  boys  of  Bloody  Joe. 

Up   to  the  gun  points  twenty-one 
Joe's  basketeers  had  tagged. 
Without  a  squint  the  other  quint 
Some   forty  points  had   bagged. 

The  second  half  did  Podunk  chaff, 
E'er  long  the  score  was  tied, 
Our  high-point  man  the  hoop  did  fan 
Where  Podunk  stood  defied. 

But  what  was  this?    Fate  went  amiss, 
Our  pride  was  wounded  sore. 
That  gangling   lout,   our  star'd  fouled  out 
And  humbly  left  the  floor. 

One  point  ahead  the  scoreboard  read 
Until  foul  fate  unkind, 
Made  two  points  sunk  by  old  Podunk 
Put  us   one  point  behind. 


The  crowd  was  tense,  they  seemed  to  sense 
The  drama  on  the  floor, 
Would  Joe  instill  a  guy  with  skill 
Enough  to  get  that  score? 

The  bleachers  strained,  the  yelling  waned, 

A  hush  fell  o'er  the  din, 

Then  Bloody  Joe  abrased  his  toe 

And  sent  big   Horsehead  in. 

"Not  Horsehead,  please!  the  crowd  did  wheeze 
In  one  convulsive  roar, 
But  Joe,  concrete,  cried  from  his  seat, 

"There's  one  coach  here,  no  more!" 

Their  hopes  dispersed,   the  players  cursed 
With   seconds   left  to   go, 
When  Horse  took  aim  and  won  the  game 
For  God  and  Bloody  Joe. 

The  fans  amazed,  were  too  bedazed 
Joe's  judgment  to  concede, 
But  soon  the  floor  took  up  the  roar, 
"His   boy   has   done   the  deed!" 

While  his  reward  men  do  accord 
In   sport's  heroic   lore, 
Joe  rubs  his  shin  and  strokes  his  chin, 
And  calmly  eyes  the  floor. 

—  T.  E.  Gumbrell 


145 


.     25  16    5  IS   19    9    ?<)  8*    37     »    sz  *s   31 


88 &    35   33   33    10    13  »1  27    **', 


tm 


Standing:    Frye,    Assistant    Coach;    Lewin;    Morelli;    DalSanto;    Tofil;    Fellows;   Belle;   Banks;  Chiodo;   Brady;   Lohmar;  Laitas;   Harris;  Goreham; 

Kowalski;    Stelzer;    Griffin;    Erdman;    Struck,    Coach. 

Kneeling:    Marsch,    Assistant    Manager;    Baldrini;    Stratman;    Morgan;    Schultz;    Swartout;    Harjes;    Rockenbach;    Baker;    Simone;    Zaranti;    Rae- 

side;  Hoselton;  Thayer,  Manager. 

Sitting:    Woods;    Gadbury;    Bough,-    Minorini;    D'Agistino;    Marlow;    Kuethe;   Boekholder;  Schlenker;  Hrehovcsik;  and  Huddleson. 


FOOTBALL 


The  Redbird  football  men  opened  and  closed  their  '47 
schedule  impressively  in  a  season  that  found  the  ISNU 
team  holding  the  statistical  edge  in  almost  every  game 
but  failing  to  take  advantage  of  several  scoring  oppor- 
tunities. A  victory  over  Wesleyan  in  the  55th  playing 
of  the  twin-city  rivalry  starting  in  1887  was  the  high- 
light of  the  season. 

Captain  Walt  Laitas,  a  veteran  of  four  years  was 
chosen   as  all-conference  tackle  for  the  fourth  time. 

The  play  of  the  year  for  the  birdies  was  a  naked 
quarterback  reverse  featuring  the  running  of  quarter- 
back Bill   Brady. 


Captain  Walt  Laitas 


146 


Coach  Struck's  men  seemed  on  their  way  toward  an 
outstanding  season  when  they  toppled  Indiana  State 
by  a  20-7  count  in  the  season's  opener  here  at  Mc- 
Cormick  Field  and  dropped  Michigan  State  Normal 
6-0  at  Ypsilanti  the  following  week.  The  first  loss  of  the 
year  came  at  the  hands  of  a  strong  Loras  College  eleven 
at  Dubuque,  Iowa,  20-7.  In  their  first  IIAC  trial,  the 
Redbirds  played  to  a  7-7  tie  with  the  Northern  Huskies 
as  time  ran  out  in  the  final  period  with  the  Redbirds  on 
the  Northern  five.  A  highly  charged  Eastern  Panther 
eleven  clipped  the  Redbirds  13-6  for  the  Eastern  Home- 


coming game,  with  DalSanto  climaxing  a  series  of  drives 
with  the  only  Normal  score.  The  Red  and  White  came 
within  inches  of  upsetting  the  league-leading  Southern 
Maroons  as  the  two  IIAC  teams  battled  to  a  6-6  tie  on 
McCormick  Field.  Brady  and  Trumpy  counted  two  mark- 
ers each  as  the  Struckmen  had  little  trouble  in  running 
up  a  26-0  count  against  the  Western  Leathernecks  at 
Macomb.  A  mixed  running  and  passing  attack  plus  the 
tenacity  of  the  ISNU  defensive  line  before  a  crowd  of 
4000  brought  the  season  to  a  close  and  spelled  a  12-3 
victory  over  Wesleyan  at  McCormick  Field. 


Did  you    make   this  tackle   DalSanto? 


147 


thrills     spills      chills 


148 


THE  "BEES' 


A  six-game  schedule  was  completed  by  the  "B" 
football  team  after  a  possible  seventh  matching  of  the 
Redbirds  with  the  Bradley  "seconds"  was  postponed 
and  finally  cancelled  because  of  field  conditions  at  the 


Peoria  school.  Coach  "Pirn"  Goff's  charges  completed 
their  season  at  the  500  mark  with  wins  over  Bradley, 
Millikin,  and  Western  and  losses  to  Northern,  Wesleyan, 
and   Eastern. 


y 


# 


w 


—  «.• 


*{ 


M 


.  "**  ~.' 


149 


Coach    Cogdal;    Judy;    DeLuka;    Orten;    Augustus;    Winkler;    Henderson;   De   Prino;   Assistant  Coach    Moyer. 


CROSS 
COUNTRY 


The  cross  country  runners  came  through  with  the  best 
season  since  pre-war  days  on  the  record  for  ISNU 
harried  teams  as  they  went  through  a  four-meet  card  of 
dual  contests  undefeated,  annexed  fifth  place  at  the 
annual  Loyola  run,  successfully  defended  their  MAC 
title  in  the  conference  meet  at  Charleston,  and  placed 
second  to  the  Flying  Crusaders  from  Wheaton  in  the 
annual  State  Invitational  Meet  held  on  the  ISNU  course. 

Victims  of  the  Redbirds  in  dual  competition  were 
Eastern  of  Charleston,  Western  Michigan,  Wheaton,  and 
Western  of  Macomb.  Finishing  with  the  first  ten  for 
Cogdal  in  the  state  meet  were  De  Prino,  fourth;  Hender- 
son, seventh;  and  Schneider,  tenth.  Other  regulars  for 
the  season  were  Captain  Bill  Augustus,  Winkler,  DeLuka 
and  Orten. 


150 


Firsf  Row:   Lockhart,   R.;  Konitzki;   Baldrini;  Schoof;   Beyers;   Belle,   Lockhart,    G.      Second    Row:     Hoerer     (Manager)  ;    Baker;    Coach     Goff; 
Brady;    Devlin;   Jorstad;   Coach    Cogdal;   Mason;    Hughes;   Assistant   Coach   Komlanc;  Higgins;  and  Thayer    (Manager). 


BASKETBALL 


Goff;    Cogdal;    Komlanc 


Captain    Lockhart 


151 


The  charges  of  Coach  Joe  Cogdal  began  on  Decem- 
ber 6  in  McCormick  Gym  with  a  71  -47  win  over  Chanute 
Field.  In  the  next  game,  the  Eureka  Red  Devils  scored 
a  60-58  reversal  against  our  boys  in  an  overtime  session 
at  Eureka,  December  10.  This  contest  motivated  a  60- 
57  victory  over  the  same  team  on  December  17. 

Captained  by  Bob  Lockhart,  the  team  won  a  surprise 
triumph  of  57-55  over  Millikin  of  Decatur,  leader  and 
defending  champion  of  the  CCI  League,  on  December 
13.  After  losing  to  Wabash  College,  Crawfordsville, 
seven  days  later,  the  Red  and  White  scored  a  decisive 
victory  over  the  traveling  Louisiana  team  here  New 
Year's   Eve. 

Redbird  competition  reopened  after  the  holidays  with 
another  victory  over  Chanute  Field.  The  same  second- 
half  act  that  had  defeated  the  Western  State  Leather- 
necks was  again  used  successfully.  Cogdalmen  whipped 
the  Macomb  five  73-56,  but  lost  IIAC  encounters  to 
Eastern  January  10,  Northern  January  17,  and  Carbon- 
dale  January  31.  A  trip  to  St.  Joseph  College  saw  a 
driving  finish  net  the  Indiana  quintet  a  79-96  victory 
after  the  Redbirds  had  matched  them  point  for  point 
most    of    the    game.     Marvin    Hamilton's    Peoria    Cater- 


pillars, an  independent  five,  was  too  much  for  the  Red- 
birds   by  a  67-61    count. 

A  return  match  at  Western  State  ended  in  a  76-55 
victory  for  Macomb.  The  first  of  the  annual  twin-city 
ISNU-Wesleyan  games  gave  a  69-62  win  for  the  Titans 
February  5.  On  February  18  the  Cogdalmen,  led  by  Dick 
Baldrini,  Captain  Lockhart,  and  Joe  Konitzki,  swept  over 
the  Titans  with  a  score  of  66-56. 

Normal  lost  65-62  to  Ball  State,  73-64  to  Shurtleff, 
and  74-55  to  Eastern.  The  Redbirds  also  bowed  to  the 
DeKalb  Huskies  at  Northern  and  to  the  Indiana  State 
Teachers  of  Terre  Haute.  A  smooth-working  Southern 
team  kept  their  conference  title  in  the  clear  here  Feb- 
ruary 28  with  a  71-46  win  in  the  final  game  of  our 
season. 

Captain  Lockhart  led  the  scoring  of  the  year  with 
323  points  in  22  games  played,  as  well  as  taking  top 
conference  honors  in  this  department  with  1  23  points  in 
8  games  for  a  15.38  average.  Joe  Konitzki  with  253, 
Leon  Heinle  with  21  4  were  other  leaders  for  the  Cogdal- 
men. Lockhart  also  was  re-elected  captain  for  next 
year,  and  was  voted  second  most  valuable  player  in  the 
conference. 


Konitzki  pushes  one 


Heinle  goes  under  and  up 


152 


153 


Hoerer      (Manager);     Burridge;    Turnquist;    Wendland;     Pilozzi;     Changnon;     Komlanc,     Assistant     Coach.      Standing:     Coach     Goff;     Devlin; 
Hughes;     Perry;     Bonczyk;     Lankford;     Yack,    Spiegel;    Johnston,    J.;    Paloumpis;  Rose;  Mason;  and  Thayer    (Manager). 


BTEAM 


Better  days  ahead  on  the  hardwood  for  the  varsity 
basketball  squad  was  indicated  by  the  won-10,  lost- 1 
record  maintained  through  their  regular  season  by  the 
Redbird  reserves.  The  B's  were  directed  this  year  by 
Pirn   Goff   and   Tony    Komlanc. 

Consisting  mostly  of  freshmen,  the  basketball  reserve 
team  counted  696  points  to  578  for  their  opponents. 
The  Junior  Redbirds  took  their  only  loss  of  the  year  at 
the  hands  of  an  undefeated  Springfield  Junior  College 
five  in  a  game  played  at  the  capital  city.  The  ISNU 
men  boast  dual  conquests  of  the  Galesburg  division  of 
the  University  of  Illinois,  St.  Bede  College,  and  the 
Wesleyan  seconds  and  scored  single  victories  over  Lin- 
coln  Junior  College,  Concordia  of  Springfield,   Bradley, 


and  the  Silver  Dollar  independent  five. 

Coaches  Goff  and  Komlanc  brought  the  B's  through  a 
59-54  victory  over  the  Bradley  seconds  and  77-73 
(overtime)  and  54-47  wins  over  the  Wesleyan  reserves 
in  games  played  in  February.  This  trip  of  victories  high- 
lighted the  season  for  the  squad  made  up  of  Kaufman, 
Beyers,  G.  Lockhart,  Burridge,  Perry,  Chiodo,  Bonczyk, 
Hughes,  Changnon,  Rose,  and  Spiegel. 

Burridge  led  scoring  for  the  year  with  1  54  points  in 
nine  games.  Guards  Bonczyk  and  Lockhart  followed 
with  84  and  61  counters,  respectively.  Rose,  Changnon, 
and  Perry  were  other  regulars  and  leaders  in  both  offen- 
sive and  defensive  play  for  the  B's. 


154 


BASEBALL 


" 


Front:    DalSanto;    McManus;    Gehrt;    Clark;   Caringelo;    Dzuris;   Tipps,-    Bass;   Woods;   McGovern;   Knapp. 

Back:    Coach    H.    Frye;   Morgan,    Manager;   Jacobucci;   Benway;    Konitzki;    VanDyke;    Siron;    Banicke;    Hougham;    Caruso;    Kaiser;    Lockhart;    Stel- 

mac,-    Magers,    Manager    and    Coach    J.    Goff. 


«    i»  *''   < 


In  the  spring  of  1947,  the  Redbird  baseball  team, 
consisting  of  a  combination  of  a  few  regulars  back  from 
last  season,  some  pre-war  lettermen,  and  a  flock  of 
promising  freshmen,  rose  on  two  particular  occasions 
to  timely  victories,  although  the  season  was  mostly  a 
rather  ordinary  one. 

Coaches  Frye  and  Goff  had  the  Red  and  White 
diamondmen  well  into  what  looked  like  the  most  suc- 
cessful season  in  years  when  they  climaxed  their  four- 
game  run  of  victories  in  non-conference  play  by  topping 
Millikin,  CCI  titlists,  by  a  5-2  score  at  Decatur. 


Capt°in    ^C(VU> 
,947  Team 


155 


Front  Row:  Coach  GofT;  Coach  Frye;  Rzadzki;  Weaver;  Dzuris;  Banicki;  Schnyder;  Wendland;  Bass;  Jurczak. 
Back  Row:  Kaiser;  Goreham;  Brown;  Felix;  Glendenning;  Bonczyk;  Konitzki;  Durbak;  Zubee;  Dal  Santo;  Mc- 
Manus;   Jacobucci. 


Games  scheduled  with  the  University  of  Wisconsin 
nine  for  McCormick  Field  on  April  4  and  5  during  the 
spring  vacation  on  the  campus  were  rained  out,  so  the 
opening  action  for  the  Redbirds  came  April  1 2  when 
they  turned  back  the  University  of  Chicago  nine  by  a 
6-0  count  on  McCormick  Field.  Joe  Banicki,  freshman 
left  hander  from  Chicago,  was  the  winning   pitcher. 

Fred  Gehrt,  fast  ball  hurler  and  leading  winner  for 
the  season,  took  his  first  victory  April  14  at  home  when 
the  ISNU  nine  dropped  Eureka  College  by  a  13-3  count 
before  a  group  of  1,200  visiting  high  school  students 
on  the  campus  for  College  Day  activities.  The  5-2  vic- 
tory over  Millikin  came  April  22  at  Decatur  in  the  Red- 
birds'  first  action  away  from  the  campus,  and  Gehrt  was 
the  winning  pitcher. 

Coach  Frye  matched  Joe  Banicki  with  Northern's  ace 
Bob  Kaczales  for  the  opening  IIAC  game  for  ISNU 
April  26  on  McCormick  Field,  but  the  visitors  went  away 
with  an  8-3  victory  to  their  credit.  Rain  and  scheduling 
difficulties  shifted  the  two-game  series  with  Eastern 
State  Teachers,  but  the  Charleston  nine  racked  up  8-0 
and  5-4  victories  when  the  contests  were  finally  played. 

The  Redbirds  had  little  trouble  winning  over  Eureka 
May  8  by  a  27-6  count  in  the  return  game  with  the 
Eureka  nine,  and  Gehrt  turned  in  his  third  victory  of  the 
year  May  3  with  a  10-0  win  over  the  Chanute  Field 
diamondmen.  Smarting  under  the  5-4  shading  handed 
them  May  1 3  by  a  visiting  Western  State  Teachers 
nine,  the  Redbirds  bounced  back  the  following  day  to 
score  a  2-0  victory  over  the  Leathernecks  at  Macomb. 
The  game  was  rained  out  in  the  sixth  inning,  but  a  long 
triple  by  Steve  Caruso  had  lengthened  the  Redbirds' 
lead  to  5-0.  The  Western  nine  were  undefeated  in  IIAC 
play  at  the  time  of  this  game. 


The  annual  cross-town  series  on  the  diamond  with 
Wesleyan  ended  with  the  Redbirds  on  the  low  end  of 
both  scores.  The  one  held  in  the  Wesleyan  stadium  on 
May  7  was  the  better  contest  of  the  two,  although  three 
misjudged  fly  balls  cost  the  Red  and  White  four  runs 
and  the  hosts  won  6-3  . 

The  return  contest  played  on  McCormick  Field  May 
20  was  called  at  the  end  of  the  eighth  inning  because 
of  rain  with  the  Titans  winning  1  2-2.  The  Wesleyan  nine 
scored  in  every  inning  but  two,  and  the  ISNU  team 
never  managed  a  serious  threat  throughout  the  con- 
test. Hits  by  Guy  Jacobucci,  Joe  Konitzki,  and  Ed 
McManus  as  the  rain  was  starting  in  the  eighth  inning 
pushed  across  the  two  tallies  for  the  Redbirds.  Fred 
Gehrt  was  credited  with  the  loss  in  both  games. 

The  coming  baseball  season  should  be  a  very  suc- 
cessful one.  One  hundred  and  fifteen  men  have  signi- 
fied intentions  of  coming  out.  The  following  are  letter- 
men  who  are  back:  Banicki,  Keiser,  Konitzki,  Clarke, 
Caruso,  Dzuris,  McManus,  Woods,  Habucci,  Dal  Santo, 
Stelmack,  and  Lockhart.  Since  the  competition  is  so 
great,  the  lettermen  will  have  to  produce  quality  which 
is  better  than  the  other  competitors  in  order  to  win 
back  a  position  on  the  team. 

Prospective  games  for  the  next  season  are:  April  2, 
Wisconsin  (H);  10,  Southern  (T);  12,  Millikin  (H); 
15,  Creighton  (H);  17,  Chicago  (H);  24,  DeKalb  (T); 
28,  Charleston  (T);  30,  Washington  (  H  ) ;  May  1 ,  Terre 
Haute  (H);  4,  Macomb  (T) ;  7,  Southern  (H );  1  2,  Wes- 
leyan (H);  15,  Chicago  (T);  17,  Millikin  (T);  19 
Macomb  ( H ) ;  19,  DeKalb  (H);  26,  Wesleyan  (T); 
and  28,  Charleston  (H).  A  southern  tour  was  taken 
during   the  Easter  vacation. 


156 


U"y— wp^»«yinnrjpj 


Buss;  Stratman;  Wilkey;  Johnston,  M.;  Winkler;  Poeling;  Orten;  Radunzel 
Irons;  Henderson.  Row  Two:  De  Prino;  Eckstein;  Osborne;  Hall;  Rich;  Grant 
Rutledge;  unidentified;  Jones.  Row  Three:  Klitzing;  unidentified;  White;  Perry 
Huddelson;  Ryburn;  Kahlier;  unidentified;  Ferguson;  Bergeson;  Wolf;  Schnyder 
Morelli;  R.  Jones;  De   Luka;  Norini;  Evans. 


Sitting:  Stratman;  De  Luka;  Eckstein;  De  Prino;  Wilkey;  Buss.  Stand- 
ing: Coach  Cogdal;  Klitzing;  White;  Evans;  Henderson;  Ferguson; 
Morelli;  Johnston;   Hudelson;   Paloumpis;  Thayer    (Manager). 


TRACK 


During  the  1947  track  season,  Coach  Joe  Cogdal's 
tracksters  competed  in  three  dual  meets  and  two  tri- 
angular affairs  before  the  annual  Elmhurst  Invitational 
Meet  and  the  MAC  contest.  They  were  topped  in  confer- 
ence competition  by  Eastern  by  83J/3  —  47%,  and  by 
Southern  79%  —  51%  in  the  first  two  meets  of  the 
season.  The  third  dual  affair  came  May  14  on  Mc- 
Cormick  Field  when  the  ISNU  team  turned  in  a  78-53 
victory  over  neighboring  Illinois  Wesleyan. 

Wheaton  took  home  first  in  the  Triangular  meet  here 
May  3  in  which  ISNU,  Northern  and  Wheaton  partici- 
pated. The  Redbirds  outdistanced  Wesleyan  and  Millikin 
with  a  20  point  margin  May  7  during  the  second  tri- 
angular affair.  The  meet  was  held  at  Decatur.  ISNU 
scored    67 Vi    points,    Millikin    47 V2    and    Wesleyan    46. 

Bill  Howard  collected  all  of  ISNU's  22  points  gained 
at  the  MAC  track  and  field  contest  on  the  Northern  State 
Teachers  campus.  The  Farmer  City  senior  jumped  22 
feet,  %  inch  for  individual  first  in  the  broad  jump,  but 
the  pole  vault,  his  favorite  event,  ended  in  a  five  way 
tie  for  first  place  with  the  bar  at  12  feet.  He  had  pre- 
viously cleared   1  2  feet,  3  inches,  this  season. 

Gene  Stratman,  a  Monticello  sophomore,  picked  most 
of  the  remaining  points  for  the  Redbirds  with  a  second 


in  the  220-yard  dash  and  third  place  in  the  100-yard 
event.  Fred  Gehrt,  varsity  baseball  pitcher,  notched  fifth 
place  in  the  javelin  throw. 

The  Northern  tracksters  had  little  trouble  dethroning 
the  1946  champions  from  Southern  Normal  in  team  scor- 
ing by  a  78  to  57  V2  count  in  team  score.  Cy  Perkins, 
Northern's  star  miler,  was  top  individual  performer  of 
the  meet  as  he  turned  in  a  1  :56.2  880-yard  run  for  a 
new   meet  record. 

Eight  lettermen  from  the  1946-47  track  and  field  team 
can  be  called  upon  by  Coach  Joe  Cogdal  for  action 
again  this  spring,  and  the  members  of  the  MAC  cham- 
pionship cross  country  team  of  1947  will  be  available. 
The  experienced  tracksters  are  Louie  DePrino,  Melvin 
Klitzing,  Ray  Morelli,  Eugene  Ferguson,  Eugene  Strat- 
man, and  Hercules  Paloumpis. 

Stratman  and  DePrino  were  chosen  as  co-captains. 
Newcomers  who  look  mighty  good  are  Orten  in  half- 
mile,  Osborne  in  the  mile,  Perry  in  high  and  low  hurdles 
and  broad  jump,  and  Jones  in  the  440  and  880.  Hen- 
derson is  a  much  improved  runner  in  the  two-mile  gallop. 
Team  balance  is  one  of  the  determining  factors  in  any 
track  meet  and  this  year  we  are  exceedingly  weak  in 
the  field  events. 


157 


947  rnQrds 
CaPto!n 


Keefe;    Dorsey;    Delery.     Standing:   Haughey;   Dambold;   Hertz;    Belle;    Friese;   and    Coach    Hill. 


TENNIS 


7947  Season 

The  opening  sessions  of  the  conference  tennis  matches 
were  held  on  the  Rochelle  High  School  courts,  but  the 
group  was  forced  indoors  by  rain  during  the  afternoon. 
The  site  procured  by  the  tournament  hosts  was  the  field- 
house  at  North  Central  College,  Naperville.  First  hon- 
ors for  the  Redbirds  on  the  courts  were  brought  home 
by  Bloomingtonians  Roger  Haughey  and  Bruce  Dambold 
who  teamed  to  win  the  number  two  doubles  title. 
Haughey  and  Dambold  drew  a  bye  for  the  first  round 
and  won  their  way  into  the  finals  in  straight  sets.  The 
final  round  against  Southern's  number  two  doubles  com- 
bination ended  7-5,  4-6,  and  7-5  for  the  ISNU  com- 
bination. Dick  Richards,  Peoria;  and  Art  Friese,  O'Fallon; 
teamed  for  the  number  one  doubles  combination  but 
were  eliminated  during  the  first  round.  The  defending 
champions  from  Southern  easily  took  the  meet  title 
with  1  9  !/2   team  points  as  they  swept  the  singles  division 


with  straight  first  places. 

During  the  matches  held  during  the  regular  dual 
season,  Coach  Gene  Hill's  net  men  scored  twin  victories 
over  Wesleyan  by  a  5-4  count  but  dropped  two  to 
Millikin  by  the  same  count.  They  bounced  back  from  a 
7-2  defeat  handed  them  by  the  Bradley  team  to  shade 
the  Peoria  representatives  by  5-4  later  in  the  season, 
and  to  split  a  dual  series  4-2  each  way  with  Elmhurst. 
The  only  single  dual  match  of  the  season  resulted  in  a 
7-2  victory  over  the   Redbirds   by  Southern   Normal. 

1948  Season 

This  season,  we  have  a  well-balanced  team  with  the 
exception  of  a  man  to  fill  the  number  one  spot;  conse- 
quently, this  weakens  all  the  rest  of  the  positions.  No 
matter  how  well  the  team  does  this  year,  one  thing  to 
remember  is  that  we  have  an  eager  bunch  of  men  who 
will  develop  into  a  stronger  team  in  a  year  or  so. 


158 


Yobski;  Mussatto 


GOLF 


7947  Season 

At  the  annual  MAC  Meet  top  honors  for  ISNU  were 
brought  home  by  Harlan  Feicht.  The  junior  from  Bloom- 
ington  toured  36  holes  on  the  Kishwaukee  course  with 
143  strokes  to  easily  defend  his  MAC  individual  golf 
title.  The  nearest  competitor  carded  a  150;  and  Harry 
Mussatto,  Highland  Park,  freshman,  took  third  for  the 
Redbirds  with  152. 

Team  strength  by  the  Northern  golf  team  was  too 
much  for  the  Redbirds,  however,  and  Coach  Howard 
Hancock's  drivers  and  putters  were  forced  to  second 
place  in   the  team  standings  by  641-645. 

The  varsity  golfers  fared  much  better  as  a  team 
during  the  MAC  Meet  than  in  early-season  dual  compe- 
tition with  conference  members.  Western  had  outpointed 
the  Redbirds   by  9  !/2 -5  !/2    and  9y2-2V2   scores,  and  the 


MAC  team  champions,  Northern  Teachers,  had  shaded 
ISNU  by  a  6'/2-5y2  count  three  days  before  the  con- 
ference match.  Victories  were  counted  in  dual  compe- 
tition over  Wesleyan  lOVi-lVi,  llVi-lVi,  and  Eu- 
reka 11-1;  and  the  Millikin  golfers  scored  8-4  and  9-3 
wins  over  Coach  Hancock's  charges  during  the  regular 
season.  Regular  team  members  along  with  Feicht  and 
Mussatto  were  Jack  Yobski  of  Decatur  and  Angelo 
Pasquesi  of  Highland  Park,  both  playing  their  first  year 
for  the  Redbirds. 

Two  of  last  season's  regulars,  Mussatto  and  Yobski, 
will  be  back  on  the  team  this  next  season.  Prospective 
games  for  this  coming  season  are  with  University  of 
Illinois  (2),  Millikin  (2),  Wesleyan  (2),  Macomb  (2), 
and  Bradley  (2).  The  conference  meet  will  be  held  at 
Carbondale,  March   21    and  22. 


159 


Pager;  Douglass;  Judy;  Mann;  Carter,  Charles.    Second  Row:  Wilson,  C.j    Hill;    Yonka;    Camboni;    Morsch,    E.;    Herebeck;    Drolle.    Third    Row: 
Coach     Gillett;     Kowalski;     Rockenbach;    Marchetti;    Bagby;    Johnson,     Ralph;    Beales;    Marketti;   and    Coach    Hill. 


WRESTLING 


The  largest  turnouts  in  several  years  were  reported 
at  McCormick  Gym  when  Coach  Gene  Hill's  Redbird 
wrestlers  went  into  action.  Fans  who  like  a  mixture  of 
rough  and  tumble  wrestling  skill  have  gathered  in 
crowds  numbering  between  500  and  700  to  watch  the 
Redbird  mat  squad. 

The  matmen  got  their  card  off  to  a  good  start  with  a 
15-9  victory  over  a  University  of  Illinois  team  that  did 
not  include  lettermen  from  the  previous  season,  although 
a  few  members  of  this  year's  varsity  competed.  The 
Redbirds  went  to  DeKalb  and  brought  back  a  14-12 
victory  when  Dick  Rockenbach  scored  a  timely  fall  in  the 
heavyweight  division.  A  second  win  was  scored  over 
DeKalb  here  at  McCormick  Gym,  this  time  by  an  18-12 
score. 

In    February    competition,    Coach    Hill's    men    romped 


over  Western  by  a  29-3  count  and  Navy  Pier,  U.  of  I. 
Division  by  24-6  before  losing  to  Bradley  16-14  for  the 
second  time.  The  state-championship  Wheaton  team 
downed  the  Hillmen  23-5  here,  but  they  came  back  to 
trip  Eastern's  newly-organized  group  by  a  38-0  margin. 
A  second  place  in  the  Wheaton  Invitational  was 
added  to  the  MAC  wrestling  title  as  the  final  team  scores 
for  the  eight-team  contest  at  Wheaton  stood  Wheaton 
30,  ISNU  16,  Bradley  14.  The  season  was  climaxed 
March  12  and  13  in  Cleveland,  Ohio,  when  Bob  Mann 
and  Dick  Rockenbach  gave  a  good  account  of  them- 
selves in  the  Case  individual  Invitational  match.  Mann 
took  a  second  place  in  the  121  division  at  the  Case 
meet  as  he  finished  the  season  with  a  15  won,  one  lost 
record.  Rockenbach  brought  home  fourth  place  in  the 
heavyweight  division. 


160 


161 


MEN'S  INTRAMURALS 


162 


Seated:   Brauer;   Lanham;   Elder;   Blake;   Dismeier;  Crump;   Eggenberger;  Johnson,  L.;  Baker;  Kneer.    Standing:  Hoelting;  Schumacher;  Grosh; 
Goll;  Leisson;  Thomas;   Bradley;  Bland. 


WOMEN'S  SPORTS 


The  women's  athletic  field  and  the  women's  gym- 
nasium were  the  scenes  of  much  interesting  competition 
this  past  year.  Following  the  trend  all  over  the  nation, 
the  coeds  of  ISNU  headed  to  the  gym  for  intramural 
sports  at  4  P.M. 

Turnouts  for  all  sports  were  twice  that  of  last  year, 
and  all  those  who  did  come  out  expressed  enjoyment  of 
their  work.  Even  the  team  that  lost  all  of  their  games, 
summed  the  whole  program  up  with  "It  was  fun,  any- 
way." 

Hockey  dominates  the  sport  season  in  the  fall.  This 
year  the  highlights  of  the  hockey  season  were  the  bril- 
liant playing  of  the  freshmen  who  won  the  class  tourna- 
ment, and  the  defeat  of  the  alumni  by  the  varsity  — 
score,  5-0. 


Tennis  and  archery  held  their  own,  too.  Many  girls 
took  part  in  the  volleyball  tournament.  A  team  from 
Fell  Hall  was  the  undefeated  winner.  Volleyball  also 
sponsored  a  sports  day  in  which  ten  other  colleges  par- 
ticipated and  the  ISNU  women  were  the  winners.  Bad- 
minton, swimming,  table  tennis,  bowling  and  square 
dancing  were  popular  also.  Basketball  boasted  twelve 
intramural  teams  plus  the  girls'  honorary  team,  which 
brought  honors  to  ISNU.  Softball,  archery,  and  tennis 
are  the  girls'  interest  when  springtime  rolls  around  — 
no  "love-sick"  girls  in  this  department! 

Playnights  and  monthly  parties  were  popular  events 
sponsored  by  the  v/omen.  For  those  who  worked  hard 
to  make  these  a   big   success  goes  our  hand  of  thanks. 


163 


u 


TfcNNIS.         Riley;    Meyer.     floe*    Row:   Smith,    L.;   Parsons;    Lanham. 


VQ»/LLt  Y  bALL.     Verhines,-   Fager;   Mombrum.     Back  Row:    Bury;    Rudmart;    Rowlings;   Carr. 


164 


BAjKbl  BALL.      Pefferman;   Jacobs;   Brauer;   Fager;   Lanham;    Riley;   Cairns;  Kneer.     Back  Row:  Verhines;  Frink;  Grosh;  Goll;  Carr; 
Davis;  Mombrum;   Hepner;  Schumacher;   Leisson;  Wilson,  D. 


n \J \*r IX C  T  .     Eggenberger;    Meyer;    Wilson,    S.;    Riley;    Goll;    Kneer.     Back    Row:    Lanham;    Schumacher;    Wilson,    D.;    Davis;    Mombrur 
Beilsch;   Cairns;   Alderson. 


165 


in 


GEIKRRL 

G 

E 

n 

i 

R 

A 

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166 


ALUMNI -PUBLICITY  OFFICE 


Edna     McCoppin,     Gertrude     M.     Hall,     Russell     Steele 


"KEEPING  ISNU  IN  THE  NEWS"  is  the  accomplish- 
ment of  the  alumni-publicity  office,  directed  by  Mrs. 
Gertrude  M.  Hall. 

Assisting  Mrs.  Hall  are  Russell  Steele,  sports  editor, 
who  also  handles  radio  news;  Miss  Edna  McCoppin, 
faculty  assistant  in  charge  of  alumni  records;  Nelson 
Smith,  in  charge  of  photography;  Mrs.  Warren  Craig 
and  Miss  Jean  Carey,  office  secretaries. 

TO  KEEP  ISNU  IN  THE  NEWS,  a  number  of  means  are 
employed,  notably  publications  and  news  that  goes 
off-campus.      Publications    include    ISNU    News    Letter, 


Alumni  Quarterly,  Campus  Towers,  Education  Today, 
and  folders  about  ISNU  for  high  school  seniors.  News 
about  ISNU  that  goes  off-campus  includes  general  news 
and  sports   news  for  press,   radio,  and   magazines. 

The  alumni  relations  department  of  the  alumni-pub- 
licity office  keeps  a  record  on  all  graduates,  works  with 
the  Alumni  Association  and  all  ISNU  clubs,  and  main- 
tains headquarters  for  alumni  when  they  return  to 
campus. 

ISNU's  alumni-publicity  office  spares  no  effort  in 
"KEEPING   ISNU   IN  THE  NEWS." 


167 


Webber;    McAdams;    Dr.    Fitzgerald;    Elliott;    Carter;    Stacker;    and    Dr.    Freeman. 


UNIVERSITY  HEALTH  SERVICE 


The  University  Health  Service  offic3s  are  located  on 
the  first  floor  of  Cook  Hall  and  in  the  Metcalf  Building. 
The  staff  consists  of  two  doctors,  three  full-time  nurses 
and  two  part-time  nurses.  There  are  in  addition  two 
secretaries   in    the   department. 

The  Health  Service  endeavors  to  furnish  medical  at- 
tention and  care  to  the  students  in  acute  conditions. 
By  offering  free  consultation,  an  attempt  is  made  to 
encourage  the  student  to  come  in  at  the  onset  of  the 
illness  for  medical  advice.  Likewise,  consultation  may 
be  obtained  regarding  chronic  illness  which  the  individ- 
ual has  developed  before  coming  to  the  university  and 
advice  given  as  how  to  best  go  about  in  the  correction 
of  these  defects.  The  main  purpose,  therefore,  is  to  keep 


as  large  a  number  of  students  as  possible  in  a  good 
state  of  health  so  that  there  will  be  little  time  lost  from 
the  school  work  and  that  when  graduation  day  comes, 
they  may  be  in  better  physical  condition  to  go  out  into 
the  world  and  take  their  places  than  they  were  in,  upon 
their  entrance  into  college. 

An  attempt  to  further  the  above  plan  not  only  is 
limited  to  consultation  given  at  the  dispensary  but  hos- 
pitalization is  provided  at  least  in  part  for  emergency 
conditions  arising  here  in  school.  X-ray  and  other 
laboratory  procedures  are  offered  the  student  in  aiding 
a  diagnosis  of  his  condition.  The  Health  Service  furnishes 
not  only  consulting  services  but  also  outside  doctors  in 
case  of  arising  emergencies. 


168 


IVrf'UK     Vf/UttlNo.      Martha   Lou   Alverson;  Joyce  Truckenbrod;  Gloria   DeVries;  Eula   Mae  Bess;  and  Jean   Kempel. 


HOMECOMING 


:WV\ 


Cardinal  Court 


Orchesis 


169 


ORMAL     RGa  NATION 


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170 


171 


CARNIVAL 


172 


GAMMA  PHI  CIRCUS 


173 


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174 


175 


176 


177 


178 


179 


180 


Carl  J.  Bell 
Editor-in-Chief 


THE  STAFF 


Edward  M.  Mitchell 
Assistant  Editor 


182 


MEMBERS    OF   THE    STAFF 

Top  Left:    Literary  Editors   Raffaelle,  Mackessy,  and   De  Luka.  Top  Right:  Faculty   Advisors    Mr.    DeClark,   Mr.    Barford,   and    Miss    Day.     Middle:   Schultz, 
Paoli,    and    Husmann.     Lower:    Photographers    L.    Smith,    Murray,    and    Judy. 


183 


ALPHABETICAL  INDEX 


Organizations 


ATA    105      Home  Economics 96  Men's   Glee   Club   and                                   Smith    Hall    133 

Home    Management   House..  123            Women's    Chorus    139      STD     114 

Blackfriars     116  Student   Council    37 

Business   Education 94      | ndex                                            1  82  1  83      N  Club 1  29 

Industrial    Arts    '  97      Nature   Study 100      yAp                                                            ]]5 

Canterbury      117      ] n tercu Itura I   Club 125      Newman      130 

College    League    of    Women 

Voters     118  ...       Orchesis 131       U  Club 134 

r             ,D        .                                           „j       Jesters     126 

Concert  Band    138 

Palette    93         . 

Elementary 95      KDE     ,08  Pep    and    University    Chorus.  .     140      Vldette     I43' 

KDP    '09      pGM     m 

Fell  Hall 119      KME no      Philadelphia 132      Wesley  Foundation 121 

Future  Teachers  of   America .  .     120  PKD    112       Women's    League 124 

Latin  98  POP                                                      .113      Women's    Physical    Education.     104 

Gamma    Phi    1 06      Lowell  Mason 99                                                                                      WRA     '  35 

GTU 107      Lutheran      127      Science 101       Wrightonia      136 

Social  Science 102 

Hieronymus     122      Maize   Grange    128      Special     Education     103       YV/CA     137 


184 


ALPHABETICAL  INDEX 


Students 


Abbey,    Phyllis    

Abbott,   Ralph    61,    153,    116,    106 

179 

Abell,   Peter    68,   121 

Acklin,   James    68 

Adams,   Richard    139,    121 

Adams,  Ted    61 

Adams,    Trenouth    47,    105,    116 

Adams,    Vernon    102,    133 

Adcock,    Beverly    

Adkins,  Donald 143,    142,    111,    116 

133 

Adkins,    Frank    

Agee,    Dorothy     

Ahlrich,    Ray    47 

Ahrens,    Ruth     1  27,   98,      78 

Akers,   Helen    78 

Albers,    Eileen    61,    122,    127 

Albert,  H.  M 78,      93 

Alblinger,    Leona     130 

Alderson,    Mary    1  04,    1  65 

Aldridge,    Virginia     78,    132 

Alexander,   Donald    

Alexander,  John    

Allan,    Robert    139 

Allen,   Charles 

Allen,    Eleanor     

Allen,    Evelyn    61 

Allen,  James    

Allman,    Richard    102 

Allsup,  Margaret 

Alpers,   Robert 

Alsene,   Edgar 

Alverson,    Martha    47,    108,    38,    126 

37,    40,    169 

Ambrose,    Miriam     143,    142 

Anderson,    Anna    

Anderson,    Carl    

Anderson,   Doreen    

Anderson,    Edward    A 175,    116,    102 

130,    177,    178 

Anderson,   Edward   H 47,    133 

Anderson,    Eva     78 

Anderson,    Jeanne    78,    95 

Anderson,    Lydia    47 

Anderson,    Mary    68 

Anderson,    Robert    133 

Anderson,   William    

Anich,   Mary    78,    104,    130,    131 

Anselmo,   Frank 

Anthony,    Betty    47 

Antoine,   Patricia    68,    142 

Appenbrink,   David    121,    133 

Appleby,  Helen   

Arbogast,  Dean    

Argo,    Ethel    

Armstrong,    Frederick     61,    133 

Aschenbrenner,    Caroline     78,      95 

Ashbrook,    James     78 

Ashcraft    La  Verne    47,    104,    118 

Ashley,    Wilma    

Assiff,    Lee    (Mrs.) 

Atkinson,    Gerald    

Atkinson,    Phillip     ...47,    110,    125,    115 

178 

Atteberry,  George 

Augspurger,    Edmund    

Augustus,    William     37,    150 

Aussprung,   Walter    

Austin,  Ruth    78,    118,      95 

Auwarter,   Donald 


Babbs,   Mary    

Babigian,    George     

Backs,   Leo 

Bacopulos,    George    142,    177 

Bagby,   David    132,    160,    130 

Bagby,    Raleigh    102,    130 

Bahan,  Maurice    

Bailey,  Claude 47 

Baird,    Howard     

Bairstow,    David    

Baker,    Blanche    47,    121 

Baker,    Donald     

Baker,    Haroldine    68 

Baker,    James    47,    110,    175,    139 

116 

Baker,  Jean 96 

Baker,    Louie    151,    146 

Bakker,    Irene    78,    132,    127 

Bakker,    Lillian    

Bakker,    Margaret    61 


Baldrini,    Richard    153,    175,    151 

146 

Ball,    Alys    

Ball,    Francis    

Ball,    Lyle    113,    106 

Ballard,     Nora     136 

Ballinger,    Alvin     

Ballinger,   Dale    78 

Ballinger,    Lloyd    

Bammann,    Derwood     78,    139 

Bandy,   Guy    78,    77 

Bane,  Ruth    

Bangert,    Mary     61 

Banicki,   Joseph    1  55,    1  56 

Bankert,    Russell 78,    126 

Banks,    Roosevelt     146 

Bannon,    Richard    78 

Baracani,    Dominic    

Barham,    Beverly    78 

Barker,    Virginia    

Barnhart,   James    47 

Barrett,   Joseph    78 

Barry,   Joan    47,    165,    135,    104 

Barstead,   Robert 

Barstead,    Ruth    Ill 

Barth,    Dorothy     68,      95 

Bartman,    Margaret     78 

Barz,    Myra     ...47,    142,    125,    121,      98 

Basham,   James    68 

Bass,    Buford    155,   156 

Batastini,    Ralph     78,    130 

Bates,    Darlene    61 

Bates,    Donald    97,    133 

Bates,    Virginia     47,    123 

Bates,    William    97 

Battiste,    Edward     68,    116,    133 

Battiste,    John    47 

Baugh,    Earnest    146 

Baxter,    Dale    128 

Beales,    Ronald    160 

Beam,    Harold    78 

Beattie,   Dora    47,    1  25 

Beavin,    Zona     78 

Beck,   Theodore    

Beck,  Walter 

Becker,  Carl    

Becker,    LaVerne    ....61,    102,    130,    100 

Becker,  Lila 

Beckley,  Virginia 61,    1  22 

Beckner,    Robert     78 

Beecher,    Fred     78 

Been,   Dorothy    1 39 

Beeson,  Jessie   

Begalka,    Donna    68 

Began,     James     78 

Behrens,    Betty    96,    1  27 

Beitsch,  Dorothy 78,    104,    165 

Belcaster,     Beverly     47 

Bell,  Carl    48,    182 

Bell,    Evelyn    48,    111,    109,    107 

Bell,  James    48 

Belle,    Merlin     198,    151,    146 

Bennett,   Alruth    

Bennett,    Charlotte    ..48,    124,    136,    119 

Benski,   George    

Benson,    William    68,    128 

Benz,    Curtis    

Berg,    Mary    

Berger,    Lauren     1 28 

Bergeson,    Paul    157 

Bergschnieder,    Helen    

Bernaciak,    Audrey     68,    95 

Bernasek,   Roger    78,    1 02,    117 

Bertinetti,    Dominic    

Bertora,   Norman    

Bertram,    Jeannine     

Berutti,   William    

Berwanger,    Eugene    78,    136 

Bess,   Eula   Mae 61,    141,    132 

Bess,    Raymond    

Besse,    Allene    44 

Best,    William    

Bestes,    Vernon    

Bettag,   John    

Beutel,    Mary    

Bevan,     Charlotte     48,    135 

Beyer,    Ruth    

Beyers,     Harley     78,    151 

Bickerman,  Janice 

Bidderman.  Kathryn    68,    95 

Bidner,  Mary 68 

Biedenharn,  Norma 

Birnie,  Myrno    78,    139 

Bishop,    Barbara    48,    110,    153 

Bishop,    Lois    

Bitterberg,   Dorothy 68 

Blake,    Betty     48,    96,    115,    123 

Blake,  Juanita    48,    104,    131,    163 

Blakemon,    Ronald     97 

Bland,   Norma    163 


Blandy,   Priscilla    

Blimling,    Mabel    79 

Blinn,    Walter    133 

Block,    Marilyn     79 

Block,    Marvin    

Block,     Wesley     

Blue,    Olive    68,    126 

Boal,    Donald     

Bodine,    Ivan    107,         5 

Boekholder,    Donald    146 

Bogue,    Juanita    68 

Boldon,    Louise    

Bonczyk,   Edmund 154,    156 

Bonnen,    Betty    

Bonnen,    Robert    

Book,    James    

Boppre,    Edwin     

Borg,    Jean     68,    39,   95,    139 

Borofsky,  Donald 

Borror,    Ruth    79,    136,    139 

Bossingham,    Mary     68,      96 

Botkin,    Evelyn     

Boussum,    Joyce    1  26,    37,      95 

Bowers,    Robert    102,    61,    134,    128 

133 

Bowles,   Robert 79,    111 

Boylston,   Patricia    79 

Bradley,    Beverly    

Bradley,    Mary     68,    131,    163,    104 

Bradley,  Willard    79 

Brady,   William    153,    129,    151,    146 

Brais,    Joyce     48 

Brandstetter,     Leslie    79 

Brandt,    Gene    79 

Brandt,    Jack    79 

Brandt,    Leroy    

Brannan,     Joyce     68 

Bratton,    Zella     48,    137,    121 

Brattrud,    Edward     61,    117 

Brauer,  Erwin    48,    97 

Brauer,    Talitha    68,    165,    131,    163 

Braun,  Samuel 

Bray,    Wendell     79 

Brayton,   Patricia    1  02,    121 

Brennan,    Francis 

Brewer,   Grover    

Brian,    Anita     79 

Brigham,    Edna    

Bright,    John     79 

Britton,    Georgianna     61,    96,    122 

Broaderick,    Charlotte     ....48,    108,    114 

119 

Broderick,    Rosemary    68,    130 

Bromaghim,    Harry     61,    95 

Brooks,   Cleo    

Brown,   Bernard    

Brown,    Charles    

Brown,    Donald    139 

Brown,     Dorsey     1 01 

Brown,   Elvin    133 

Brown,    Etta    

Brown,    Frances    103 

Brown,    George    

Brown,    Harriet    Gale 

Brown,    Harriet    Grace 79 

Brown,    Howard     48,    97,    46 

Brown,    Josephine    104,    131 

Brown,   Juanita    79 

Brown,   Leonard 

Brown,    Nancy    79,    126 

Brown,    Orville     48,      97 

Brown,     Roger     79,    156 

Brown,    Ruth     48 

Bruce,    Robert    

Brummitt,   Richard    

Bruno,    Kenneth    

Bruno,    Lois    61,      94 

Bruno,    Ralph    

Bruns,    Margaret    68,    139 

Brunson,   Marjorie 

Brust,    Audrey     61,    40 

Bryk,    Edward    

Buck,   Oliver    45 

Budd,   Ellen    79,    178 

Buker,    Charles     

Bunderson,    Frances 61 

Bundy,   Roy    

Bunks,    Wesley    

Burk,    Charles     79 

Burkey,    George     48 

Burkhart,    Betty    48,      94 

Burr,  Jean    132 

Burridge,    Edward    1 54 

Burris,    Bruce    

Burroughs,   Alice    

Burruss,    David     

Burton,   Elmo    

Bury,  Pauline    68,    121 

Busby,    Byron    79,      97 

Busch,    Ethel     68,      95 


Buss,    Kenneth    37,    40,    106,    133 

157 

Buth,    Dorothy    79 

Byrne,  John    68,    139,    105,    133 


Cabalek,    Mary    130 

Cade,    Oscar    

Cairns,    Dorothy    ...48,    165,    135,    131 

Calhoun,    Eugene     79 

Callaby,    Donald    79,      94 

Calvin,     Robert     68,    115 

Camboni,    Roy     79,    160,    133 

Carney,  Betty 

Camp,   Kenneth   ....175,    126,    111,    116 

Campbell,   Alice    

Campbell,    Donita    68,      94 

Campbell,  Helen 

Campbell,   John    49        94 

Campbell,   William    

Capodice,  Jack    

Carey,    Alma    

Carey,   Diana 61 

Carey,    Edwin    116 

Carey,   Margaret    68,    130 

Caringello,    Michael    155 

Carlock,   Don    

Carlon,   John    

Carlson,    Beverly    

Carlson,  Carol    69,    1  21 

Carmichael,    Gwynneth     68 

Carmody,    Margaret    

Carnahan,    Kathryn    

Carpenter,  June 79,      95 

Carr,   Margaret    79,    165 

Carr,   Martha    61,      98 

Carter,   C.    Keith 49,    142 

Carter,     Charles    Clair 160 

Carter,     Charles     Herbert 132 

Carter,   Don    49 

Carter,    Maude     .  .  .  : 

Caruso,    Stephen    129,    135 

Cash,    Richard    

Cass,    Martha    

Castelli,    Rosemarie    69 

Castle,    Fred    

Cates,  Vernon    

Caudle,   Charlotte 79 

Cernick,    Zora    

Chadock,    Betty    

Challenger,   Kathryn    79 

Chambers,    Dorothea     105 

Chambliss,   Joseph    79 

Changnon,   LaVerne 79,    133,   154 

Chapman,    Anne    

Chapman,  Shirley    

Chase,    Barbara     49 

Chase,    William     

Chiodo,   Frank    146 

Christensen,    Martin     

Churchill,    John    

Cienki,    Freda    

Cienki,   John    

Claflin,    Clarence    

Clark,    Elizabeth     49,    121,    123 

Clark,  James    

Clark,    Lee    

Clark,    Raymond     49,    155 

Claus,   John    61,    105 

Clayberg,    Louise     139 

Claypool,  James    

Clemens,     Betty     79 

Clifford,    Lawrence    80 

Clifford,    Lloyd     69 

Cootney,     Dorothy     80 

Codding,    Margaret     

Code,    Mary    49,    130 

Cole,    Betty    

Coleman,    Roy    139 

Condie,    George    61,    95,    133 

Condit,   Rowena    80,    132 

Cone,    Bettylou    

Convis,    Bernard     

Cook,    Lora    61 

Cooke,    Jack     80 

Cooper,    Glen    

Cooper,     Harry     49 

Copas,    Melba    80,    96 

Copeland,   Margaret    69 

Cope,    Frank     

Copple,    Helen    49,    114 

Corbitt,    Mary     61,      98 

Corn,    Barbara    80,    121 

Corn,    John    80,    137,    121 

Cornelius,     Shirley      .80,    102,    121,       95 
Corradetti,    John     61,    133,    102 


185 


Cotlone,    Benjamin     Dismeier,    Doris     ...62,    104,    131,    163       Fahsbender,    Dale    Galhman,    Leta    

Cotton,    Henry    Dix,    Edna    139       Fairfield,   Verle    Gee,    Lorraine    51,      94 

Cottrell,    Gordon     .  .  .  .  80,    49,    107,  179       Dobbs,    Donald    .        Fallon,    Andrew     130,    133,    107       Geers,    Robert    

Cottrell,    Paul    80,    139,  121        Dobrik,    Anna     80,    104       Farrar,     Eleanor     62       Geiger,    Margot     40 

Coulter,    Mary    Dohleman,    Clifford     Fedanzo,    Anthony     Gemeny,    Blaine    51 

Cowles,    Imogene    59,    113,  94       Doll,    Roy     80       Feeney,     Doris     81,    130,    139       Gengler,    Inez    125,    130 

Cox,   Kathleen    80       Domingez,    Lupe    Felix,    Henrietta     130       Gentes,     Elmo     51,    113 

Cox,    Marjorie    69,  130       Donelson,    Duane     Felix,    William     156,    139       Gentes,    Harold    Richard 81,    116 

Cox,    Roy    Donham,    Mary    Fellows,    Cleon     81,    146       Gentes,    Mary    142 

Coy,    Mary    1 30,  1 36       Donley,    Gayle     69       Felten,     Constance     62       George,    John    51 

Craddock,    Addie     61        Donnawell,     Helen     62       Fenton,    Jacqueline     81,    96,    130      Gerfen,    Annabelle    62 

Craddock,  John    80       Dooley,    Helen     80       Fenton,     Margaret     62       Gerfen,    Raymond    51,      97 

Craft,    Neva    80,  1 39       Dorsey,  John    Fenton,     Marion     1 39       Geshiwlm,   Charles    139 

Craig,    Warren    49,    38,  126       Dorsey,     Richard      ...50,    134,    158,    133       Ferguson,     Donald     Geske,    Bob    51 

39,  112       Doss,   Claremont    Ferguson,     Eugene     157       Gesslein,    Charles    

Crandall,    Roland     Douglas,    Billy     160       Ferri,    Gust    Getz,    Marilyn     70,    108 

Crane,     Phyllis     80       Douglas,    Frances    80       Ferris,    Dorothy    Geuther,    Charlotte    70 

Creech,    Henry Douglas,     William     133       Ferris,   Harry    50       Giacobassi,   Tilio    51,    101,    107 

Cretcher,    James     ...59,    101,    175,  126       Douglass,     Barbara     50       Ferry,    Pat    117       Giehl,    Rosemary    70,    130 

176,  179       Douglass,    Doris    69       Fields,     Edwin     62,    133,    116       Gillen   John    70,    97,    110,    130 

Crites,  William    Douglass,    Thomas     Fields,    James    179       Gi  I  lis,    Dorothy    51 

Crone,    Hollis     Dowdall,     Leven     50,      97       Fields,    Kathleen    50       Gilmore,    Lynn    81,    132 

Cross,    Barbara     80,  126       Downs,    Betty     69       Findley,    Barbara     69,    136,    139       Gilmore,     Robbie     81 

Cross,     Betty     ..49,    108,    101,    110,  142       Doyle,    James    80       Finley,    Walter     Gilmore,    Spencer    51,    129 

109,  39       Doyle,    Mary    62       Finstad,    Adolph    102       Glas,    William     

Cross,  Kathryn        49,    108,    1  10,    42,  109       Dozier,    Levi     Fishel,     Harley     Glaser,    Louis    

Crowdson,    Alta     Drada,    Verna    130       Fisher,    John     Glendenning,    George     156 

Crowell,    Lois    49,    125,  102       Drake,     Marilyn     80       Fisherkeller,     Henry     Glenn,    Robert    

Crum,    Dwight    Dralle,    David    160       Fitzwater,    Dolores    Glover,     Gerry     62 

Crum,    William     Dravis,     Donald     Flannery,     Margaret     62,    102       Goble,    Betty    70,      95 

Crump,    Mary    80,    61,  104       Drescik,    Frances    Fleming,    Ann     69,    130       Goddard,    Bobbie    81 

Crump,    Norma     80,  102       Drew,   John    Flesor,    Theodore     Goetz,    Marjorie    51,    111,    107 

Cullen,    Marjorie    Drinhaus,    Winifred     62,    127,      94       Flessner,    Geraldine     81        Goetze,    Dolores    82,    127 

Cullick,   Margaret    80       Driskill,    Annette     102       Fletcher,    Dello    Goff,    James     

Cullinian,    Mary     ...61,    108,    114,  130       Droste,     Betty     50,    100       Fletcher,     Jean     Goff,    Mary   Helen    

Cullison,    Janet    Druce,    Ray    Forbes,    Wilma    70       Golden,    Robert    

Cultra,     Ella     Dumont,    Frances    81,      95       Ford,    Bermri    Goll,     Lillian     70,    165,    163 

Cundiff,    Richard    Dunagan,     James     Forrest,    Donald     Gooch,    Amanda    

Curl,    Lawrence    Duncan,    Helen     104       Fort,    Walter    Good,     Leone     

Curry,    Kenneth    110       Duncan,    Thomas    Fosse,    Mary     102       Goodell,    Richard    

Curtis,   Carl    80       Duncanson,    Barbara     69       Foster,    Glen     62,    133       Goodwin,    Thomas     

Curtis,    Clifford    Dundich,    Anne    Foster,    Merrill     Gordon,    Catherine    

Cusac,    Dorothy    49       Durbok,     Robert     156       Fouts,    Miriam    70       Goreham,    Sidney     133,    146,    156 

Dryoff,    Ethel   Mae 81,    132       Fowler,    Betty    Gorman,    Louise    

Dzuris,    John     155,    156       Fowler,    Virginia    81,      95       Gottschalk,    Pearl    

Fox,    John    50      Goudreau,  Constance 51  ,    124,      95 

DFox,   Nina    70      Graham,    Hazel     
Francis,     Billie     81,    126,    40,      37       Graham,  John    

EFranciskovich,    Robert    70,      97       Graham,     Margaret     139 
Francois,    Dehise    81,    139       Grant,    Robert    157 

Daleanes,    Tom     Franklin,   Margaret    Grantham,    Anne     82 

Daley,   Al- Jean    Earl,     Mary     81,      95       Franklin,    Robert    Gray,    Alice     82 

Daley,    John     106       Easterday,     Margery     Frederick,     Carol     81,    121,    128       Green,    Doyle    Rae 

DalSanto,  John    ...146,    115,    156,  155       Eberspacher,    Beatrice     Fredericks,     Donna     81,      95       Green,     Gerald     70,      94 

Dalziel,    Margaret     Ebert,    Eugene    81,    130       Freedlund,    June     62,    127       Green,    Hubert     

Dambold,    Bruce    158       Ecklund,     Roberta     81,      50       Freedlund,     Thomas     Green,    Richard    

Danekas,    Alice    80,  102       Eckstein,   Joseph    157       Freese,    Albert     97,    37,    106       Green,     Roberta     51 

Danhof,    Dona    69       Eden,    Ruth     69       French,    Harold     81,    139       Green,    Ruth     

Daniel,    Edward     ...49,    175,    141,  139       Edwards,     Doris     French,    Iva    70       Greene,    John     82,      93 

116       Edwards,    Dorothy     French,    Joseph    37,    40,    62,    102       Greening,    Vernon    51,    113 

Darnall,     Richard     94       Edwards,     George     50       Friese,   Arthur    97,    46,    40,    158       Greeson,     Dorothy     70 

Dorr,    Kenneth    80,  132       Edwards,     Mary     ....50,    124,    112,    115       Frink,    Howard    100,    101        Gregg,    George    

Davidson,  Audrey    176       Frink,    Melba    .  .  .  50,    40,    104,    165,    135       Gregory,   Norma    70 

Davis,    Dean    Eggenberger,    Margaret    .  .  .69,    104,    165       Fritts,   Charles    Gresham,    Muriel     62 

Davis,    Donna    163       Fry,    Mildred     51,      93       Grever,    Glenn     

Davis,  Eugene Egges,     Eunice     130       Fuchre,    Genevieve    81        Griffin,   Jo   Anne    

Davis,    Melvin    Egli,     Delmar     Fuess,    Mary    81        Griffin,    John    146 

Davis,    Robert    Eickert,     Lloyd     Fuller,    Dixie    Grimm,    Donald     

Davis,    Rosemary     ...49,    104,    165,  135       Eiler,    Paul     Fulton,    Donald    Grine,     George     97,         4 

Davis,   Wardella    Einert,     William      50,    102       Fulton,    Norma     Grine,    Josie     4 

Davy,    Doris    80,  137       Ekin,    Floy    50,    121        Funk,    Barbara     70       Grosh,     Phyllis     62,    104,    165,    163 

Dawson,   Donald    Eklund,    Donald     Furtney,    Betty    70       Gross,    Dolores     

Dawson,     Nita     50,    124,  94       Elder,    Gwen     69,    104,    163       Furtney,    Charlotte     81       Gross,     Lon    Jean 82 

Day,    Robert    69       Elder,    Mary    81,    96,    139       Furukawo,    Lily    70       Grosshart,    Georgia     ..52,    108,    35,    101 

Deal,   Ralph Elliott,     Eleanor     124,    135,    119 

Dean,     Marian      50,    109,    111,  125       Elliott,    Gene     69,    105,  130                                                                                                  Grove,     Patricia     

121       Elliott,    Iva    /-*                                           Grupe,   Audrey    104 

Deck,   Wyman    Elliott,     Lola     67                                               KJ                                              Guerrini,     Ralph     

Defenbaugh,   Ralph Ellis,    Donna    139                                                                                                  Guither,     Irene     52,    126 

De    Groff,    Melvin 106,  133       Ellison,    Nora     Gadbury,    James    70,    146       Gum,    John     

De   Groot,    Glenna     80       Ellison,     William     Galeaz,    Candido     Gumbrell,    Thomas     143,    142 

Delaney,    Edward    Ellsman,     Shirley     69       Gallagher,  James    Gustafson,    Irene    ....82,    137,    118      94 

De  Lapp,   Gwendolyn    98       Ely,    Homer    Gallagher,     Margaret     126,      81        Guth,    Eleanor     82,    132,      95 

Delery,     John     158       Ely,    Virginia     Galloway,    Duncan    ...51,    97,    125,    139       Guth,    Walter    

De   Luka,    Charles    ...69,    190,    129,  157       Emmons,   Marjorie    69,  95                                                                                     "7       Gutzwiler,    Wayne    

De    Luka,    Rose    69,    183,  142       Engelman,     Betty     Galloway,    Shirley    62,    104,  131 

Dempster,  John    141        Engle,    Alverne    Galvin,    Robert    134 

Denen,   Robert English,    George    Galvin,    Tom     

Denier,    Lloyd     Ill        Epperson,    Ervin     Gandy,    Wilma    70                                               |_i 

Denman,   Wayne    Erdman,     Myron      146       Gang,     Iberia     ^1 

Dennis,    Constance    61        Erickson,     Jean     62,      95       Gang,    James     

Dennis,    Laura    69,  95       Erickson,    William     Gannon,    Wayne    Hackley,   Marion    70 

Denzer,    David    69,    97,  121        Ernst,    Howard     Gant,    Eileen    Haddick,    Thilerna     

DePauw,    Muriel    Esposito,    Frank     Gant,    Harry    81        Hadley,    John     

DePrino,    Janet    Esposito,     Margaret     Garabadion,    Sophia     Haffner,    Theresa     

DePrino,    Louis    1 50,    67,  1 57       Estes,   James    Garber,    Albert     81 ,    1 02       Hager,    Wanda     94 

Derr,    Milton     133       Eterno,     Rosemary     62       Gardiner,    Betty    81,      93       Hagerman,     Harry     52 

Deters,    Anthony     130,  128       Eudeikis,    Robert    Garehee,    Marcia     Hahn,     Helen     62,    108,    119 

Devine,    Donald    139,  130       Evans,    Glenn     133,    157       Garinger,     Philip     Hakeman,     Lewis     

Devlin,    Kenneth     151,  154       Eveland,    Betty    50       Garls,    Mary     70,      94       Halford,    Norman     

Devonshire,    Arthur    Evelsizer     Ruth    Garmon,    Edward     Hall,    Betty    52,    118,    95,    117 

Devonshire,    Emmalu     Ewert,    David     Garner,    Carol    81,    139       Hall,    Donald     82,    102,    157 

DeVries,    Gloria    69,    96,  127       Ewing,    Arthur    69,    126,    139       Garner,   Raegene    51,    139       Hall,  Mahlon    

DeWerff,    Dorothy    80,  121                                                                                                   Garner,    Violet     51        Hal  lam,   Cecilia    70,    130 

Dick,    Beverly     69                                                                                                  Garner,    William     51        Hallam,    Joseph     82 

Dickenson,  Mary    ....61,    136,    119,  139                                                                                                  Garretson,     Letha     81,    132       Holler,     Doris     82 

Dickey,  Alice    62,  132                                                 p                                               Garrett,    Harold     Halloran,   Ellen    130 

Dickey,    Harold    •"                                               Garrett,    Shirrilyn     70,      94       Halm,    John    

Dickey,    Robert    133                                                                                                  Garrison,   Charles    44       Halpin,    Mary     179 

Dickson,    Lunetta    62,  94       Faas,     Richard     Garver,    Faithe    Halterman,     Betty     82,      95 

Diemer,   Kenneth    Faellaci,    William     39,    37,    133       Gassman,    Wanda    62,      96       Hamilton,    Robert     

Diener,    Richard    50,  109       Fager,    Mary    81,    104,    165,    131        Gast,    Barbara     93       Hammer,    Evan    70 

Diller,    Carol    Fager,     Patricia      69       Gates,    David     Hammerlund,    Charles     

Dillon,  Georgia    50,  1 07       Faggetti,    Joe     1 30       Gates,    Gordon    Hanebuth,    Eloine    70 


186 


Honeline,    Patricia     82       Holloway,    Edward    Jones,     Ronald     157       Krause,     Vivian      ....63,    108,    114,    109 

Hanson,    Arthur   C Holloway,    Marion     44       Jones,    Shirley    83,  1 37                                                                                      119 

Hanson,   Hugh    Holman,   Alva    Jones      Walter     .                                                          Kreiling,    Carol     71  ,      94 

Hanssen,    Dolores    ...70,    124,    102,    136       Holtkamp,    Charles    71        i          '     ».,       .        D                     71      10n      ,  «n       Kreis,    Virginia     

■  i     .          .      — .       i  u    i    l     rTj         j                                                              Jones,     Wanda     Kae /I,    IJ2,  104       w     _          £,                                                            *-» 

Harbaugh,    Charles    Holub,    Edward    119       Kremen,    Florence    63 

Harder,    Richard     Holzhauer,     Stanley     71,128  ...                                                                '          Kroff,   Celeste 72,      93 

Hardy,    Anita     82       Hoover,   Wilbur    83,      42       Jones,   Wanda   Rose 63,41,      95       Krug,    Richard    42,37,103 

Hargis,   Virgil    52       Hopkins,    Phyllis    83       Jordan,    Bonita    Krummrich,    Betty     84,    102 

Hari,   Arcelia    70,      32       Hopley,    Ronald     Jorstad,  John   Fosse 53,    97,    151        Kruse,   Marian    54 

Hories,     Glenn      52,    146       Horner,    Arthur     Judy,    Dan    ....71,    160,    105,    121,    128       Kruzan,    Albert     

Harmon,    Ray     Horton,    Robert    150       Kudelas,   Marion    72,    136 

Harner,    Naomi    96,    121        Hoselton,   Clarence    146       Judy,    Harold    63,    183       Kuerth,    Roberta     

Harrington,    Marcia     95       Hott,    Preston     Juers,    Donald    Kuethe,    Melvin     1 29,    1 06 

Harris,     James     Hougham,     Robert     155       Julian,    Harold     Kuhn,    Evelyn     54 

Harris,   Josephine    Houston,   Virgil    Junis,    Ann    53,    104,    130       Kumler,    Wilbur     

Harris,   Julia    82       Howard,    Roy     Jurczak,    Thaddeus    156       Kuntz,    Lowell    

Harris,    Richard     70,    102,    117       Howe,     Mary    Elizabeth Jury,    Dorothy    53       Kurtz,     Charles     

Harris,    William     129,    146       Howell,    Gene    71,    122,    105,    100       Just,    Raymond     Kyger,   William    

Harrison,    Edgar    1 25,    1 30       Howell,    Robert    45 

Harrison,     Elizabeth     82,    1 04       Hower,    Virginia    

Harrison,    Florence    82       Hozenfield,    Jacquilyn     83 

Hart,    Nancy    Hrebik,     William     [(  I 

Hartel,    Audrey     82,    118,    117       Hrehovcsik,     George     52,    106,  146                                                ^  L 

Harton,    Robert     94,      82       Hubbell,    Lorena    52 

Hartshorn,    Irene    70,    106       Hubbuch,    George    Kaercher,    Genevieve     103       LaBounty,    James     

Harvey,     Zola      108,    45,    109       Hudak,    Beatrice     127,      94       Kain,    Frances    71,    103       Lagneaux,    Charles    54 

Harwood,    Mary     100       Hudak,    Katherine    83^    127       Kaine,    Mary    130       Laird,    Paula    

Hastings,     Lyle     Huddleson,    Gerald    157,    146       Kaiser,     Henry     53,    155,    156       Laisure,    Corliss     

Hatfield,    Mary     70       Hudelson,    George     .'  Kaliber,     Charles     157       Laitas,     Walter     54,    146 

Hathaway,    Jane    (Mrs.) Hudson,    Richard    71  ,    1 28       Kalips,    Marjorie     83       Lamb,  Da r line 

Hauge,    Charlotte    ...52,    122,    118,      35       Huelsmann,    Miriam    71,    122,    139       Kaluf,     Nina     63       Lamb,    George    L 

Hauge,     Millard     62,    97,    129,    158       Huffington,    Florence    Kampwerth,     Leonard     83,    127       Lamb,    Mary    Ellen 

179       HufTington,     Margaret     ....83,    121,      95       Kapraun,    Margaret     53,    130,      94       Lamberton,   Walter    

Haughey,    Roger    62       Hughes,    Claude    '.....'  Karloski,    Ruth     83,    120,    102       Lancaster,    Betty     72,    126 

Haughey,   Willis    62       Hughes,     Leland     130,    128       Karr.    Ila    Landes,    Robert    

Hauschild,     Dorothy     71,    110       Hughes,    Ronald    151 ,    154       Kath,    Eleanor    Land  is,  James    

Hauser,     Elizabeth     Hull,    Clark    '  Kauffmann,    Maurice     Landolt,    Joan     84,    102 

Hayden,    June    62,      95       Hull,    Robert    53,    139,    116       Kaufman,     Robert     Leslie Lane,    Barbara     

Hayden,    Kenneth     Hultgren,     Janice     63       Kaufman,    Rogers    Lang,    Dale    

Hayes,     Elsie     Hultgren]    Robert    63,  110       Keefe,     William     ....53,    111,    116,    118       Langan,    Anne    84,    130 

Hazard,    William     Hummell,     Bette     .'  178,    158       Lange,     Lorraine     72,      94 

Hozenfield,    Jacquilyn     Humphrey,   Betty 83       Keen,    Stella     Lanham,     Maryanna     72,    104 

Head,    Paul     105,    128       Hungerford,    Harold     63       Keeney,    Mary     83,    121  ,    139       Lankford,   George    154 

Head,    Phyllis    Hunley,    Norma    Keeran,     Lois     83       Lapan,    Roger    

Headley,    Norma     102,    121,  95       Hunsaker,     Helen     ...............                  Keller,    Paul     63       Larson,    Eleanor    ....54,    127,    115,    108 

Headrick,    Jean    82       Hunt,    David    Kellett,    Mary     71        Larson,    Gaynor    84,    38,    139 

Heald,    James    82       Hunt,    Luella    Kellison,    Ann    Larson,   Grace    

Healy,     Marian     52,    1 23       Hunt,   Mary    Kemmerly,    Jack     Larson,   Joan    1 30 

Heap,    Lucille Hunt'   Phi\\\p    ..................  .  Kenmitz,     William      ..63,    101,    110,    127       Lartz,    Clare     

Heaton,    Dale    82       Hunter,    Helen    ',  100       Law,     Lois    

Heeschen,    Elizabeth    71,    131        Husmann,    John     101,    107,    183       Kemp,    James     Lawless,    Richard     84 

Hegner,    Richard     52,      97       Huttenburg,    Vera    '.....'      63       Kempel,    Jean     63,    180,    104,    135       Lawrence,    Evelyn    

Heighway,   James    Hvalgren,     Edith     71,    104       Kempin,    Siegfried    Hugo Lawrence,    Patricia    63 

Heiniger,    Esther    Ill,    107       Hymbaug'h,    Wesley     '  Kennedy,   Mary    Lawrence,    William      63 

Heinle,     Leon     153                                                                                                   Kennedy,    Stanley    Lawson,    Mildred     63 

Held,    Elaine    82,    121,    95,  137                                                                                                  Kenyon,    Angeline    83,    102       Lawson,    Robert    72,    121,    128 

Heller,    Harlan     Kerber,    Gertrude     Lawson,    Ruth     63 

Hellyer,    William     i                                                 Kerchner,    Charlene    83,    139       Leake,    Andrew    

Helton,    Erma   May    52                                                 '                                                 Kern,    Arthur    Leake,    George    

Hemken,     Joan     52,    42,    94,  1  27                                                                                                  Kersten,    Carol     Learned,    Wendell     

Henderson,    John    ..82,    157       Irons,    Keith    83,    157       Kerz,    Betty    53       Lee,    Berta    72,      94 

Henderson,    Mary    95       Irons,    Kenneth     Kessler,    Marvin     97       Lee,    Ruth     

Henderson,    Wayne    82,    150       Isermann,    Carl    Kettleborough,    James     Leffingwell,     Oran     

Hendren,   Dorothy    Kidwell,    Ralph    Leggett,    Marie    

Henebry,    Philip     82                                                                                                   Kieser,    Lucille    63,    102       Leggett,   Mary    

Henkel,   Paul    130                                                                                                  Kiiskila,     Roy     53,    113,     94       Leggett,     Nellie     72 

Henriksen,    Doris    71,  94                                                  I                                                Kime,    Earl    53,    130       Lehe,     Ruth     

Henry,    Alice    .'  52                                                -*                                                Kinder,    Thomas     lehn,    Caro     84,      93 

Henry,     Hilda     82                                                                                                   King,    David     83       Leigh,    Barbara     72,      96 

Hepner,   June    82,    165       Jackson,    A.     Irene King,  Pansy    Leigh,    Shirley    84,    104 

Herberts,    Roger     .'      97       Jackson,    Gerald     53,      97       King,    Voris    53,    101,    109,    107       Leisson,     Lois     72,    104,    165,    163 

Herget,    Mary     52       Jackson,     Mary     63,    104       Kinsella,     Charlotte     83       Lemburg,     Patricia     72 

Herget,    Robert    Jacobs,    Mary    165       Kinsella,    Margaret    Lemen,    John    

Herink,    Homer    Jacobs,     Shirley     ....63,    132,    130,    119       Kinsey,     Eldridge     Lemke,    Charlotte    95 

Herrman,    Carl     Jacobucci,    Guy    129,    155,    156       Kipling,   Mary    83       Lemon,    Alan     63,    133 

Hertz,    Donald 71,    121,    158,    133       Jacques,    Eddie    Kirchner,    Alan     53       Lennon,    Georgia     

Herzog,    Sylvia     52       Jakubiak,    Frank    Kirchner,    Anna    71        Lesher,    Forrest    84 

Hewitt,    Norma    62,    124,    132,    139       Janes,    John     63       Kirkman,    Margie     83       Lesnick,    Ralph     

141        Janick,    Benetta    83,    102       Kirkpatrick,    Eula     93       Lewin,    Richard    146 

Hewitt,    Russell     52,      97       Janssen,    Erma     83       Kirkpatrick,     Mildred     53       Lewis,    Charles     

Hextell,    Doris    .'  Jedlicka,    Ina     95       Kirksey,   Gene    Lewis,    Eva     

Hextell,    Glenn     82       Jenkins,    Johanne    83       Kisellus,    Leonard    53       L'    Heureux,    Robert    54,    177 

'ggins,    Allen    Jenne,    Jane     ...53,   35,    118,    124,    127      Kitchell,   Madalynne    54,    123      Lichty,   Robert    132 

ggins,     Richard     151       Jennings,   James    112       Klaman,    Harold     Licocci,  Tony    

ggins,    Robert     Jensen,    Velva    June.  .71,    125,    121,    137       Klayer,    William    Licocci,    Viola    72 

Id,    Edward     Jimmerson,    Phyllis    Klein,    Dolores     Lichman,    Jack     84 

Idebrand,     Phyllis     Ill,    125       Jodchim,    Sylvia     (Mrs.) Klepfer,    Martha     Liggett,     Evelyn     72 

leman,     Esther     45,    106^    131       Johannes,    Myrtle     83,    131        Klimek,     Margaret     83,    130,    136       Light,    Garon    

lemon,     Mildred     .'      71       Johnson,    Carol     83,      95       Kline,   Charles    Lighthall,    Mary    63,    119,      5 

II,    Ella     Johnson,    Doris    83       Klitzing,    Lois     127       Limper,    Marianne     

II,    John    Johnson,     Freda     ....71,    137,    142,    125       Klitzing,    Melvin     157       Lindbeck,    Lorraine     72,    103 

II,    Kenneth     Johnson,     Fredric     Kloener,    Shirley    Lindgren,    Helen    

II,    Thomas    82,    160       Johnson,    Gilbert     63       Klonowski,    Adaline    71        Lindsey,  Robert 

I  Hard,    Goldie     82'      96       Johnson,    Luella    104,    106,    163       Klump,   Waunita    Lisowski,    Thaddeus    72,    126,    130 

nderlond,     Edward 83       Johnson,    Marianne     71,    126,    115       Kmetz,    Michael    71,  139                                                                                      136 

nshaw,   Don    Johnson,     Peggy     128       Kneer,    Marian     63,    109,    104,    165       Lithonder,   Frank    

nshaw,     Leota     Johnson,    Ralph    83                                                                          135,    163       Litherland,    Ann     

nshaw,     Mary     83       Johnson,    Ralph   Wayne 71        Knight,    Lyle    Little,    Loren     

rst,     Evelyn     Johnson,    Robert    Knight,    Robert     63,    120,    121,  107       Littlejohn,    Marianna     . 

tman.     Donna     71      126       Johnson,    Ruth     137,    63,    125       Knous,    Howard    71        Litwiller,    Nelda 


H 
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H 
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H 
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H 
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H 
H 
H 
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H 

Hobart,    Mark Johnson,    Virginia     71        Koenig,    Harriet     71        Lober,    Doris    84,    137,      95 

Hobick,    Barbara    Johnson,   Wilbur    Kohrt,    Carl    Lochbaum,    William     

Hodel,    Marjorie     52,    124       Johnston,    Arthur     Kolowski,    Gertrude     63       Lockenvitz,      Phyllis      54,    113,      94 

Hodge,    William     97       Johnston,   Joyce 97,    154       Komlanc,    Anthony    54,    151,    154       Lockhart,   Gail    84,    151 

Hodges,    John     Johnston,   Marvin    53,    160,    157       Komnick,    Margaret     71        Lockhart,   Marilyn    

Hoelting,    Lu   Anna.  .  .71,    104,    135,    163       Johnston,    Patsy     93       Konitzki,    Joseph     153,    151  ,    155       Lockhart,    Robert    ...  .63,    153,    129,    151 

Hoerer,    Lawrence    151,    154       Johnston,     Richard     156,    152       Logan,   Aliceann 84,    96,    136 

Hoerrmann,     Mariorie     ....71,    132,      95       Jones,    Barbara    Jean Koons,    Mary    84,    139       Logue,  Shirley 72 

Hoffman,    George    Jones,    Barbara    Ruth 53       Kosiek,    Leonard    Lohmar,    Donold    146 

Hogle,    Irma    Jean     ..137,    62,    121,      95       Jones,    Casper    Kowalski,    Richard    160,    146       Lombordi,    Jeanette     84 

Hohenboken,     Nadene     Marie Jones,    James     Kramer,    Winnifred    P 84       Lonergan,     Gerald     

Hoenstein,    Luella    Jones,    Paul    Krapf,    Robert    D 101,    100       Long,    Patricia    84,    139 

Holland,    Thelma     Jones,     Ralph     157       Kraus,    Rita    108,    101,    110,    109       Long,    Roland     

Hollister,    Joan     62       Jones,   Roger    Krause,    Frank    Long,  Virgil    


187 


Longbroke,     Horace     110 

Longnecker,    Shirley     63,  130 

Lorton,   Warren    

Losew,    Pete     

Lovekamp,   John    84 

Lovins,    Delmar    72,  128 

Lowe,  Jeanette    84,    96,    128,  139 

Lowe,  Warren    

Lown,    Ruth    

Lubbs,    Anna     102,  93 

Lucas,    Charles     84,  121 

Lucas,    Vivienne    72,    137,  124 

121,  95 

Luce,    Arden    84 

Lucero,    Paloma    54,    1 26,  94 

Ludlam,     Merrill     

Luettich,   John    

Luke,    Elinore    

Lund,    Betty    63 

Lundberg,   Elaine 54,  127 

Lundberg,    Mary     72,  127 

Luster,     Mildred     54 

Lyles,    Dorothy    64 

Lynch,    Michael    

Lyons,    Kathleen     84,  1 20 

Lyons,     Margaret     ...84,    72,    120,  95 

Lyons,    Marie    132,  120 


Martin,    Deon    Ross 

Martin,    Geraldine     

Martin,    Howard     

Martin,    Joanne    85, 

Martin,    Julia     55,    126,    111, 

Martin,     Peggy     

Martin,    Rachel     

Martin,    Wilma     

Martinie,   William    72, 

Martinus,    Vilma    


M 


McAdams,    Edgar     '  . 

McBain,    Philip     120 

McBride,    Maryrose    72,    124 

MacCallum,    Helen     64 

McCann,    Raymond     

McCannon,   Richard 

McCarthy,    Marilyn    

McConkey,    Donald    133 

McConnell,    Madelyn     

McCoppin,    Edna    

McCormick,     Harry     1 30 

McCormick,    Thomas    84 

McCoy,  Charles Ill 

McCray,    Marianna    Lee 102 

McDaniels,     Elizabeth     ...54,    114,    142 

McDermand,    James     72 

McDonald,    Crawford 

McDonald,    David       ...84,    97.    130,    128 

McDonald,    James    V 64,    130,    105 

177 

McDonald,    John     

McFadden,    Sheila     72 

McGeath,    Marion    64 

McGovern,    James    64,    155 

McGrath,    Nancy    

McGuire,    Joseph     

McGuire,     Leland     

McGuire,    Mary    

Maclntyre,     Janette     72 

McKibben,    Donald    

McKee,     Floragene     84 

McKee,    Virginia    102 

McKeehan,    Charles    64,      37 

McKibben,    Donald    1 39 

McKibbin,    Martha     117 

McLaughlin,    Barbara     84,    104 

McManus,   Edward    155,    156 

McMillin,    Delores    45 

McMurray,  Alleen    

McMurray,    Deloyce     

McNeil,   Janice    54,    96,    1  23 

McNeil,    John     54 

McShane,    Kathleen    120,      77 

McVickar,    Edward    54,    105,    128 

McWilliams,    Rajean    

Mabie,     Edris     

Macek,   John    

Mackessy,    Margaret     72,    143,    183 

142,    130 

Mackey,    Paul     

Mackey,    Roy    84 

Macy,    Lawrence    

Madacey,     Reva     84 

Maddrey,    George     54,    106,    129 

Magers,    Delbert     1  28,    1  55 

Maguet,    Donald    

Maile,     Delores     84,    104,    131 

Maitlond,    Betty     84 

Mollmann,    Mildred     72 

Mallory,    Virginia    54 

Malmberg,    John     72,    110 

Malmstead,    Barbara    127,      95 

Malott,    Dorothy    1 30 

Mancuso,    Josephine     72,    104,    130 

Mann,    Robert    1 60 

Mapes,     Loris     

Mapes,    Pauline     85,    126,    131 

Moauet,    Donald    

March,    Donald    

Marchetti,    Frank    130,    160 

Marich,  John    

Marketti,    Louis    160 

Markionni,     Guido     

Marks,   Doris    

Marlow,    Robert     1 46 

Marr,    Esther     

Marsh,   Evelyn    

Marshall,     Eleanor     

Marti,    Carol 

Martin,    Carol     85 


George     72,    151, 

Jonice     

Sherlene     

Kathryn     ...  .55,    137,   35, 
Clarence    


Mason, 

Mason, 

Mason, 

Masten 

Matas, 

Matone,    Helen     .  .  . 

Matsler,    Gerald     .  . 

Mattinson,  Mary    .. 

Maurer,    Bernice    .  . 

Maurice,    Robert    .  . 

Maxwell,    Edlon     .  . 

Maxwell,    Orla     .  .  . 

May,    Robert    

Mayes,    Sarah 
Meader,     Alfred     .  . 
Meeter,    Patricia    .  . 
Meiner,    Beverly     .  . 
Meinert,    Frank     .  .  . 
Meinhold,    Doris    .  . 
Meisgeier,    Gloria 
Meisinger,    Harold 
Melvin,    Kenneth    . 
Mentzer,    Ruthirene 

Edward     . 
Joan    

James     .  . 
Jacquelyn 

James      .  . 

Marihonor 
Richard 


Mercier 
Merkel, 
Merrick, 
Merritt, 
Messick, 
Metcalf, 
Metcalfe, 


85 

37 
95 
37 

107 
85 

104 
85 

121 
85 

154 

102 

118 


73 
85 
97 

126 
85 
64 

136 
73 

73 

139 

93 

179 

104 

9-t 

85 


Metz,    Wallace    

Metzger,     Dale     

Metzke,     Fred     

Meyer,    Gerald     

Meyer,    Odessa    

Meyer,     Richard     ...85,    139,    127, 

Meyer,     Roland     

Meyer,    Rose     85,    165,    131, 

Meyers,    Arlyne     

Meyers,    Lois    

Michael,     Esther     

Micka,   Joseph    

Miglio,     Louis     64,    102,    133, 

Miles,   John    64,    102,    111, 

Miller,    Audrey     

Miller,  Carl    

Miller,   Dorothy    

Miller,    Eleanor    

Miller,    Irma     

Miller,    Kenneth,  Jr 

Miller,     Kenneth     Reid 

Miller,     Lawrence     

Miller,    Lois    64, 

Miller,   Marilyn    

Miller,     Marjorie    Ann 

Miller,    Marjorie    Jane 

Miller,    Mary    

Miller,    Ralph    

Miller,    Shirley    

Miller,    Stanley    

Miller,    Warren    

Miller,  William    

Mills,    Betty    73, 

Mills,    Eugene    

Mills,   Marna    

Miner,    Lyle    

Minger,     Margaret     

Minorini,     Amedeo     1 57, 

Mitchell,     Edward     55,    122, 

125, 

Moberly,    George     

Mohler,   Margaret    

Moline,    Nellie     

Molloy,     Norman      

Moma,    Erma     73,   96, 

Mombrun,     lola     85,    104, 

Monroe,    Olive     

Montedonico,    James     

Montgomery,    Alvin     

Montgomery,    Bernice     

Montgomery,    Beverly    

Montgomery,    Leland     

Monti,   Albina    

Montross,     Raymond     73, 

Moody,    Thomas     

Moore,    Colvin     

Moore,    Donald    

Morelli,     Raymond     157, 

Morgan,    James    55, 

Morgan,     Willard     73, 

Morris,    John    H 

Morrison,   Charles    

Morrison,    Lois    64, 

Morrissey,    William     

Morsch,   Edward    160, 

Morsch,     Emil      

Mowery,     Joy     

Moyer,  William    55, 

Muehling,    Eleanor    

Muffley,     Lorraine     55, 

Munson,    Janice    55,    113, 

Murphy,    Daniel     

Murphy,    Mary    G 


116 
73 
73 


93 

128 

106 

85 

44 

85 
107 
121 

85 


125 
85 


127 
73 


124 
85 
55 

85 
146 
182 

94 


129 

165 

64 


104 
139 


130 
146 
146 
155 

101 
96 


150 
73 

118 
94 


Murphy,    Mary   Jean 

Murphy,   Richard    1 33 

Murray,    Francis     

Murray,  Marion    143,    183 

Murray,    Mary    

Murray,  William    1 26 

Musick,     Virginia      85,    117 

Mussatto,    Harry    1 59 

Musselman,    Hester    

Mutch,    Winifred    64,    128 

Myers,    Bernard    

Myers,    Danny    

Myers,    Darrel    

Myers,   Dorothy    . 

Myers,    Homer,    Jr 73 

Myers,    Marjorie    


N 


Naffziger,     Eldon     55 

Naffziger,    Joseph     55 

Naftzger,    Martha    141 

Nagel,    Roberta     73 

Nakagawa,    Joyce     73 

Natzke,  Arnold    

Neaveill,     Frances     

Negley,    Dean    

Neil,    Robert    

Nellos,    George     139 

Nelson,    Glenn     

Nelson,    Wayne     

Nestler,    Donald     85,    102 

Neumann,    Thomas    110 

Newswanger,     Peggy     85,    128 

Newby,    Max     85 

Newmister,    Eda     

Newton,    Charlie    

Nicewander,    Mary    

Nichol,    Robert    

Nickel,    Elry    

Nicol,    Loren    

Ninios,    Katherine     73 

Nissen,     Helen     85 

Nolan,     Ruth     ..73,    180,    175,    143,    142 

Noland,    Mrs.    Eunice 

Norbeck,    Marjorie    85 

Norini,     William      ....55,    97,    110,    116 

Norton,    Dennis    

Norton,   Irene    122,    180,      38 

Norton,    Katherine     64 

Norton,    Reeve    116 

Nortrup,    Alta     64,    122 

Nottoli,    Rosemary     

Nugent,    Lois     85,    137,      95 

Nussbaum,    Wilma     

Nyberg,    Ralph     


Oberstar,    Robert     

Obrecht,    Phyllis    75 

O'Connell,   Thomas,   Jr 

Odenthal,   William    

Oder,    Glenn    

Oesch,   Howard    

Oesch,     Laveta     

Oetter,    Willa     73,   95,    139 

Ogden,    Kathryn     64,   93 

Ogg,   Sharon    

Oglesby,    Ray     97,    133 

Oko,  Alex    85 

Olsen,    Eleanor     55,    104,    131 

Olson,    Beverly    73 

Oilman,     Donna     ...85,    135,    132,    139 

Ort,   Henry    86,    121 

Opperman,   Emma    73,    126 

O'Rourke,    Anna    

Orten,  Roscoe,  Jr 1  50,    1  57 

Osborn,   Jacque    86,    157 

Osborn,    Joyce     

Osborn,    Murray,   Jr 139,    116 

Osner,    Audrey     

Osner,    Richard    

Owens,    Laverne    73 


Pacey,     Barbara      73,  95 

Paepke,     Irene     64,    111,    109,  102 

107 

Page,     Haden     

Pagels,   Jean    104 

Pager,    Louis    160 

Paine,     Harold     55,    111,  125 

Palmer,    Janet     73,  94 

Palmer,   Jean    73,    110,  94 

Palmer,    Phyllis    73,  104 

Paloumpis,    Hercules    133,  154 

Paoli,  Guido    55,   97,    183,  37 

40,  130 

Parcher,    Jack    

Parke,     Bernalice     73 

Parker,    Clarise     86,  131 

Parker,    Robert     64 

Parker,     William      97 


Parmele,    Calvin     73,    128 

Parson,   Mary    64,    165 

Parson,    Phyllis    86 

Pasquesi,    Angelo    

Pastemack,     Henrietta     

Patterson,   Charline    86,    104 

Patzer,   James    64,    139,    107,    177 

Pauketat,    Dorothy 

Paulsen,    Marjorie     73,    40,    127 

Payne,    Stuart    

Paynic,    Stephen     64,    130 

Peaco,   Harmon    64,    133,    111,    102 

133 

Pearce,    Barbara     

Pearson,    Phyllis    

Pedigo,    Joyce    86,    121 

Pedley,    Laura     73,    120 

Pedroni,    John    86 

Pedrotti,    Leno    64,    110 

Pedrotti,    Rudolph     74,    110 

Pefferman,    Marjorie    64,    130 

Pehlman,    Verna     56,    111 

Pemberton,    William     64,    130 

Pement,    Arvilla     64 

Penn,    Marian     94 

Perhach,    Andrew     74 

Perkey,     Litta     

Perry,   Robert 1  57,    1  54 

Persky,    Jack    

Persons,    Myrtle     

Petefish,    Betty    112,    121 

Peter,    Betty    95 

Peter,  Dorothy    86,    1  80 

Petersen,    Mildred    86 

Petersen,    Verna     86,    1 27 

Peterson,   Bruce    

Peterson,    Raymond    56,    107 

Pfeifer,    Mary     130 

Pfeiffer,     Niedeulk     86 

Pfoff,    Truman    

Phillips,    Clyde    

Phillips,    John    

Phillips,   Virginia    74,    142,      98 

Phillips,    William     

Piazzi,     Lois     74 

Pieper,    Dean     

Pierce,    Everette    

Pierson,     Lloyd     

Pirka,    Arnos     56,    117 

Pirtle,    Alfred    

Pittman,    Robert     133 

Pitts,    Patricia    

Pitzer,    Thelma     

Plese,    Marilyn    64,    130,   131,    107 

Pletscher,     Eva     74,    122 

Plummer,    Vernon    64 

Pointer,    Edward    

Pointer,    Juanita    

Pokarney,    Milton     

Poland,    Merle     

Poling,    Harry    1 57 

Polizzi,     Francis     

Pollak,   Leo    101 

Pollock,    Joan     64,      95 

Pomrenke,    Robert    

Popejoy,    Dorothy    

Popejoy,    Eldred    116 

Popejoy,   William    116 

Porter,    Charles    56,      97 

Ports,    Roy     

Posorske,    William     45 

Potts,   Doris    

Potts,  Mary    

Potts,    Russell    

Powell,    Gordon     

Powell,  Jack    

Powell,    Mary    

Powers,    Charles    

Pratt,    Dorothy    86,       96 

Prebeck,   Phillip    74,    116 

Price,    Fay    

Price,    Herbert    133 

Price,  Joy 74,    137 

Proctor,     Margaret        .56,    108,    120,    101 
126,    124,    115 

Pschirrer,     Audrey      74 

Psotko,    Frank    

Pulaski,    Doris    65,    114,      32 

Punke,    Margaret 86 

Purcell,   Yvonne 

Purdue,    Dolores     

Purdue,    James     128 

Purkey,    Ernest    143,    142 

Pyle,    Joyce    


Q 


Quensel,    Raymond    

Quigley,    Vera     44 

Ouimby,     Jean      65,  103 

Quinn,    Michael     177 


Rabattini,     Anthony     

Racobs,    Donna     56,    1  26 

Radcliff,    Carol     86 

Raddis,  Donald    

Radenbaugh,    Nettamae    86 


188 


Radko,    Jack    130  Schlenker,    Jacob     1 46  Smith,   Vanwert 

Radliff,  Joanne    139  Schlosser,    Betty     87,    121  Smith,   Evelyn   57,    137,  109 

Radunzel,    Fred    86,    1 57  Schlotter,    Kenneth    Smith,   Harold    Takehara,   Doris    66 

Raeside,  Thomas    133,    146  Schlotman,    Phyllis    87  Smith,   Helen    65      Ta|bot>  james    

Raffaelle      Rosemary     74,183,142  Schmid,    Winifred     87,130,      98  Smith,  Jean    65       Tarvin,   Mavis    

Rafferty,' James    Bernard Ill,    133  Schmidt,     Betty     74,    103  Smith,    John     Taylor,     Betty     57 

Rahn,    Donald    Schmidt,    Gene    Smith,    June     Taylor.    Dons     86 

Rainey,   Jeanne    86  Schmidt,    Gerhardt    127  Smith,     Lois    .  .  .  65,    1 65.    1 36,    1 35,  1 9       Baylor,  Robert    ...............  „.      9  4 

Rakow,    Edwin     Schmillen,   Mildred    74  "   '    ...       Teer',    Vivian     57,125 

Raley,    Edmund    86  Schmink,    George    Smith,   Lyman    57,    1/5,      BJ      Terr||      James    

n,  c   t.     ■«      li    i  Smith,     Nelson      iui        _              ...        ,                                                AA      ini 

Raley.    Edward    86  SchmiH,    Helen     e  "  lu     rw*n  75     10-i      133       Testa,    Wanda    66,    104 

' '  ri_        iin                                                    0-710-7  omitn.ijwen     /j,     iuj,  ijj       _               ., 

Rommel,    Catherine     ..74,39,103,139  Schmoll,   Donavon    87,127  •  Teter,    John    

B«m«v     John  Schneeberg.    Delvine    65,97,116  J™    ['    B»h.rt Teuscher,     Nancy     88 

Kamsey,    jonn    =  *                                          •  bm  th,    KooerT    T1_  o_l.     ■                7*      no     ici      i  aa 

Rank     Egan    Schnehage,    Lillian    74  Smith;    Sy|via     87,    127,    ,5.    ,  39       Thayer,    Robert    75,    139,    1 5 J,    146 

Ranz,   Mary    137  Schneider.   Faye 87,      74  Soeldner.    Emma    130      Theesfe|d     E|mer \ 

Rasmussen,     Nets     Schneider,    Herman    Soeldner,    Nellie T ...     John  

p.,.,,,,..     Rohp,i  Schneider,    Ralph     Solomon,   Everett 87,  139                 ■ 

Kasmussen,    KooerT    '  ■"  ^«  .....  07       Thilmony,    Edward     

Rntrliffe     Madeleine  Schneider,    Richard    157  Souers,  V10  et    87                       "               .  . 

Karclirre,   waaeierne    e,k-»ll     c.t„ll_  e      1  d  .l  87       Thoennes,    Donald     

Rauschke,    Paul    Schnell,   Estella    Soules,    Ruth    8/       Thomas      Char|es                                        .    101 

Rowlings,     Connie     ..86,132,104,165  Schnyder,   Robert    150,156  Sparrow,    Robert    Thomas'    Freda         '"                         ...       75 

Ray,    Barbara    74,104,131  Schock,    James     Spaulding,    Carl     Thomas]    Morion     110,      45 

Reaman,    Anita    86  Scho    ,    Arnold     87  Spear     Kenneth    Thomas,     Richard     88 

Reber,    Joanne     SchollEd.th 65,      94  Specht     Thelmc    75  Robert     106 

Redfern,    Marian    74,94  Schonert,   Barbara 74  Spellerberg,  Sue 75       Thomas     The|ma                             ..                 75 

Reed.   Evelyn    86  Schoof.John 153,151  Spencer.   Donald    Thomassen,   Connie    57,109 

Reed,   Marilyn    86  bchoonover,   George    Spencer,    Tremoine    5/ 


Thomassen, 
Thomasson,    Merl 


Reedy,    Elmer    Schopp,    Eleanor      74       Sperry      Daniel     Thompson,    Barbara     44 

Reese.   Harvey    Schramm,    Edward     Spiege  ,     Arthur     Thompson,    Frank     97 

Reeser.    Norma    56,    108,    37,  124  ^chriefer,    Roger    Spiegel,    Fred     127       Th                      Marjorie     

"9  \u        a"'    17° '      «7       |pons'er'    ,M°ry     ..-,,„■    ,  Thompson,    Mary    88,103 

Reeves,    Paul    Schroeder,    Arlayne     87       Sprecker,    Lela    65,    120,  103       Th  Mi|dred                              66        96 

Reidy,   Vincent    74,130  Schroeder,    Dorothy    74,      96       Spyra     Theodore Thompson;    Wayne    .  .'.' .' 

Reifsteck,    Paul    128  Schroeder,    Martha          . 74       Squoglio      Gloria     83       Th          b          h     Wayne    

Reig.    Carol                                              65.  104  Schroeder      Martha    Maria Squires     Cosimir    Tuervtl      Jam's 

Reinhort,    Mary     56.119  Schuldt,   Dorothy    Stadt,    Robert     Tinette, 'Doris    ..'.'.'.'.  57,    1  20,    1  26,    1  27 

Rener,    Henrietta    Schultz,    Charity    74       Staker,     James     5/  115 

Rennels,    Lois     103  Schultz,    Charles    Stalions,    Phyllis    88       Tins|ey      Rose                                        88 

Reynolds,    Murial     65,  95  Schultz,   Chester    56,    97,    146       Stalter,    Evelyn     45       Tjp|er    'william                                 115 

Rhoda,    Rosemary     74,  96  Schultz,    Louise    56       Stanko,    Henry    Tipton      Shirley                                       75     139 

Rhodus,    Howard    65,  116  Schultz,    Marie    65,    104,    135      Stanley,  Jeon    88,  93      Tofi|     Donley        '                              13o'    116 

Rhodus,    Jean     Schultze,  William    142       Stanley,    Patricia    75,    137       To|ber,     Dona|d  .' 

Rich,    Victor     157  Schumacher,    Christine    .  .     .56,    104,    165       Stanwood,    Emily     -            Manly 

Richards     Carl  158                                                                                      163       Staszeck:      Stanley 88       Townsend     Willard  97 

Richey,    Gladys    Schumacher,    Herman    Staubus,    Billie    88       Trachse|      j      ce  75 

Ridlen,   Helen    65,  95  Scott,   Clarence    Stearns,  Marilyn    

Ries,    Marian    86,  127  Scott,    Iretha    129       Steckel,   Clarence 88,  77 


Tracy,    Harold 
Tracy,   Orville 


Riley,    Douglas    Scott,    Mary    87,    132       Steele,     Betty     75,    94,    121       y       '•   wi||  128 

Riley,    Helen     ...65,    40,    104,    165,    164       Scrinen,    Eldon     Steele,    James    Travis'     Evelyn 88     139 

Riley.    Rose    86,130      Scully     Corrine    65,108,130,102      Steele,    Nelle     Trembacki,   Raymond    75,111,      37 

Rippeil,    Calvin     65,      97       Sears,    Willard Steele.   Norma VnVlll        Triebe,    Frederick     116 

Ripper,    Nelda    86,    139       Sedlock,   Theophile    56       Steele,    Patti     104,  131        Tou(     lack 

Ritch;e.     Florence               137     65.96.118       Seeman      Lois       Ste:n     Elose       T-oxel     V--non 

Ritter.    Richard     Seghetti      Albert    Steinebach,    Herman    Trucke'nbrod,    Joyce    37,      87 

Rabbins,    Fredrick    Seipel,    Jean 74       Stemgrader,    Wilbur    •-••■       0,       Trumpy,   Robert    180 

Robbins,     Jeanne     74       Seldon,    Kathleen     Stemhagen,    Betty     65,    104,  93       Tucd     Mmk                       37     n2     )29,      60 

Robbins,    Phyllis    74       Self,  Alice    74       Stelmack,    Steve    155       Tu|le'    Melviri  '  ' 66 

Robbins,    Rosalie     139       Sengpiel,     Robert     87       Stelzer,    Maynard    146       Ju'     John                                   07     ]](,        93 

Roberts,    Eileen     56,124       Sepich,    William     Stenderup,     Margit     65,114       Turnqu;s,     Dona|d  .  .  . 88^    1  27^    1  07 

Robertson,    Edwin    Severe,    Russell    Stephenson,   Betty    57       Tweet       R'osa|yn        66 

Robinson,    Elizabeth    Severn s,  Wileta    87,    139       Stephenson,    Martin     Tyler      Ray                 .......  .57,    101  ,    110 

Robinson,    Louise    86,    1 39       Sevier,     Barbara     56,    114       Sterling,   Joan    88 

Rock,    Edna    Sexton,    Peggy     65       Stevens,  Patricia    57 

Rockenbach,    Richard    160,129,    146       Seymour,   Robert    Stewart,     Mary     88 

Roeder,     Everette     Shaffer,  Joyce    Stimeling,    George     88,  1 33                                                .  . 

Rogers,    Paul    133       Shaffer,    Marjorie    Stimpert,  Jack    U 

Rolley,     Chester     97       Sharda,    Jean    56,    114,    142       Stipp,    Mary    75,  103 

Rose,  John 1 54       Sharp,    Robert    Stockwell,    Jesse    Uhrenholdt      Barbara     57 

Rosen,    Paul    86,    139       Shaw,     Marilyn     75,    137       Stokely,    Lee    J 139       u|uig     Ja(.k           97^    m,    116,    127,    115 

Ross,    Marilyn     86,      96       Shawback,    Darrell     Stoll,    Mary    Ullsvi'ch     Dick    ....'....'. 139 

Rouse,    Clarence    102       Shay,    Dorothy     75,    137,    110,    121        Stone,    Lloyd    Umphress,    Ruth     

Rouse,    Ralph     87       Shea,   Elizabeth Stoops,    Marilyn    88       u nderkoffler,    Milton    58,    110 

Rousey,    Mira     65       Sheffield,    Herbert    Storts,    Saralea     Underkoffler!    Everett     110 

Rozum,    Fred    116       Shenk,    Marjorie    65       Stortz,    Florence     75       Ungerott      Frank     

Ruble,    Dennis    87,    102       Sheppard,   Audrey    87,    104       Stout,   Betty 88       Urbarow'ski      Rosemary 

Rudd,   Alfred    Sherbert,    Constance    87,    136       Stratman,    Vernon     157,  146 

Rudd]    Edward    Sheridan,    Lester    Straub,    Hazel     88,  96 

Rudmon,    Ruth    87,    165,    130,    102       Sharrard,    Donald    139       Strauss,    Jean     139 

Rusak,    Daniel    Schickle,     Paul     65       Streid,    Carol    88,  37                                                .. 

Rust,  Mary Shields,    Barbara     87      Streid,  Juanita    57,    101,  1 10                                             V 

Rust,     Phyllis     65,    131  ,    119       Shoemaker,    Ida     75       Streit,  Wesley    

Ruth,    Kenneth    Short,     James     87       Strejcek,     Mary     88,    104       Valesano,   James    58,    143 

Rutledge,    Robert     157  Shotick,   Andrew    ...65,    122,    127,    103       Strong,    Donald    133       Vandeveer,    Shirley     88 

Ryburn,    Harold    157       Shreve,  Iris 56,    41,    121        Stroud,   James    105,    128       Van  Dyke,    Charles    155 

Rzodzki,     Edwin     1 56       Shryock,     John     87       Strubhar,    Joan    102       yan   Dy|<e'    Gordon    

Shull,    Roy    65       Stuart,    Dortha    75,      94       Van    Huss,    Wayne    

Sigler,  Vincent 75,    105       Stuart,    George    Van  Scoyoc,  James 

Simberger,   Richard    87       Stuart,    Robert    Van    Scoyoc,    Richard    58 

SSimms,    Donald    Russell Stuckey,  Carl    Vegna,    Paul     134,    133 
Simone,     Pasquale     146       Stuebe,    Alberta     Veihman,    Clifton     

Simpson,  Jessie    56,    1  37       Stueber,   Mildred    57,    119       Ver nines,   Betty 88,    104,    165 

Soari,    James     Simpson,     Mildred     87       Sturm,    Violet    Verrill,   Fay    66 

Saldinger.    Sonya    Sims,    Lowell    Sturn,     Pauline     Veselack,     Richard     

Salmon,    Jane    65       Siron,  Nan    87       Suft,  Sylvia    .       Virgo,    Ambrose    

Salyers,    Martha     Siron,    Paul     75,    155       Sullins,   Marian    Vitzthum,   Jean    88 

Salzman,    Roy    175       Sisevich,   Anthony    Sullivan,    Doris    88       Volkert,     Robert     58,      46 

Samsel,   Norma    Sister  Mary   Coleta   Barth Sullivan,    Eleanor     75,    130       Volstorff     Glenn     .  97,    133 

Sandell,    Elizabeth    Skau,    Eleanor     87,    102,    121        Sullivan,    Wilma     88,    132       Voss,    Newell    Radcliff    

Sanders,    Raymond    Skinner,    Helen     Summer,   Donald    Vranicar,    Marie    75,    130,    102 

Sanford,    Robert     Skinner,    Shirley     Summer,   John    

Souder,    Orville     128       Slayback,   Donald    Sumner,     Wilma      66,    108,  136 

Saylor,    Betty    87,    121        Sleevar,    John     119,  95 

Seaman,    Ruth    74       Slomer,     Ruth     65       Sunnesen,    Eileen    88,    142,  13  > 

Sconavino,    John    Slothower,  William    Surratt,   Rose    66,    42,    37,  101 

Schad,     Dorothy     Small,    Robert    65,    126,    102,    115       Sutter,    Bonnie    Lou    88 

Schoitz,   Bernard    Smedley,    Lucille    Sutton,    Marjorie    57,  101        Wade,    Betty     ...58,    110,    37,    118,      37 

Schaitz,   Dorothy    Smith,    Arthur     56,    111        Swan,    John    Waechter,   Dorothy    

Schauerte,    Constance    74,      95       Smith,    Celia    103       Swank,   George    Wagner,    Merlee     89,    105 

Scheller,   Faye    Smith,    Charles    57       Swank,    Ruth     Walden,    Oliver     75 

Schertz,    Gene    Smith,    Corthy    121        Swanson,    Burdette    Walker,    Jack     89 

Schierer,    Robert    Smith,    Dolores     75,      96       Swartout,    Harlow     88,    116       Walker,    Kathryn    

Schilling,    Alfred     142      Smith,    Eloise    87      Sweeney,    Sarah     88,    139      Walker,    Mary     

Schloboch,    Robert    87,    1 39,    1 33       Smith,    Lester     Sydell,   Lois 75       Wallace,    Noble    


w 


189 


Wollinge,    Marilyn    West,    Pauline    8°       Wilson,    Jeane     142      Wurzburger,  Wendell    

Walsh,    Martha    89  Whamond,    Robert    Wilson,   Mary    76,    105,    135       Wyrick,    Mariorie    

Walter,     Lowell    McNees Wheeler,    George     35,    109       Wilson,     Rebecca     132       Wysong,    Aaron    76,    139,    100 

Walter,    Neal    James Whitaker,    Mary     76       Wilson,    Shirlee    89,  165 

Walter,    Patricia     89,    104,  130  Whitcomb,    Ruth    89       Wilson,    Wanda     

Waltmier,     Carolyn    Mae White,    Glenn     Wilson,    Yvonne    59,    123,  95  y 

Womba,     Donald     89  White,     Lois     58       Wiltshire,    Thomas     ' 

Wantland,    Ralph    White,     Richard      35,    37,    1 57,    1 07       Winget,    Everett     58 

Ward      Ara     66     124,    94,    139,  108                                                                                     179       Wingo,    William     89,    133       Yack,   Jerry    154 

Ward!    Claudia    Whitlock,    Marzetta     ..76,    114,    94,    139       Winkler,    John    150,    157       Yahr,    Charles    102,    107 

Ward]    Harold    Lee    102,  178  Whittemyer,    Gloria     Winsett,    Alice     Yeast,    Joyce    

Ward,    Lyle    Whitmore,    Edward     58,    110       Wins  hip,  Walter 89       Yeoman,    Dorothea    66 

Ward!    Paul    Wickham,   Henry Winter,     Leslie     Yobski,    Jack    59,    159 

Wardell,   Wanda    89,  139  Wickliffe,  Audrey    Winterroth,     Ruth     Yocum,     Robert     89,      94 

Warring,    Jane     89  Widmayer,   Donald    116       Winterroth,    Shirley     Yoder,    Jean     

Warring,   Jean    75,  120  Widmer,   Merle    179       Wirtjes,    Carol    76,      94       Yohnka,    Richard    160 

Waters,    Norma    75,  95  Wiemer,    Melvern     89       Wise,    Byron     76       Youhas,   Andrew    

Waters,     Norma     75  Wiesbrock,    Raymond    Wise,    Harlan     Young,    Harriet    

Waterstreet,    Viola     89,  127  Wilcox,   Clara    76       Wise,    Janet     Young,    Phyllis    40,    131 

Watke,    Gwenivere    66,  103  Wildman,    Marie     Wise,    Rosemary    58,    139       Yount,    Merna     90 

Watkins,    Audrey    75,    42,  118  Wilkey,     Carter     58,    97,    157       Wise,     Wendell      66       Yunaites,    John     

Watson,    Bettie     1 37,  66  Willan,    Eloise    L Withers,    Frances     58 

Watson      Doris     89  Willeford,     Dick     1 39       Witherspoon,    Genevieve     89,  1 06 

Watts,    Luvenia    Williams,  Corl    66,    133       Wittmer,   Margaret    179 

Weathers,    Dolores     137,  131  Williams,     Charles     58,      97       Woerner,     Lillian     104                                                J 

Weaver,    Beryl    66,  156  Williams,     Donald     Woerner,  Paul    *- 

Weaver,    Gordon     97  Williams,    Elizabeth    Woertz,    Ruthmorie    89,  139 

Weaver,    Helen    66  Williams,    Gerald     89,    133       Wolf,    Marion     Zabel,    Donald     

Weaver,    Loren    89  Williams,    James     89       Wolf,    Barbara     Zaborac,   Tom    

Webb,    Robert    Williams,   John    76       Wolfe,    Jimmie     89,    157       Zaborsky,    June     90 

Webber,    Dorothy    .  .  . 58,    1  26,    1  27,  1  1 5  Williams,   Mary    137,      95       Wolfe,    Freeman    66,    110,    39,    133       Zaranti,    John    146 

Weber,    George     89  Williams,    Mary     Woltzen,    Marilyn    58       Zehr,   Byron    

Weber,   Jewell    F Williams,    Nancy     89       Wood,   Donald    66,    103       Zugler,    Harry    

Weber,     Philip     79,    180,    175,  106  Williams,    Patricia     Wood,    Rowena    100,    146       Zillman,    Orville     90,    102,    127 

Wehrle,    Donald     Williams,    Phyllis     Woodberry,    Estelle     Zimmerman,    Christian     105,    128 

Wells,    John    120,    121,  134  Williams,    Sam     97       Woodburn,    Warren     Zimmerman,    Clarice     90 

Welsh,     Robert     89  Williams,    William    Lee 58,    97,    125       Woodrum,    Barbara    89,    103       Zimmerman,   Dorothy  J 

Wendl'and,    Gene     156,  154                                                                                      136       Woods,    Roy     155       Zimmerman,    Edna     59,    139 

Wenger,    Mildred     102  Williamson,    Robert     Woosley,    Joan     59,      95       Zimmerman,    George     130 

Wepprecht,    Kenneth    58,    111,  102  Willis,   Maxine    137,    58,    125       Wray,  Glenn    Zimmerman,    Mary    

Wesloh,    Clarice    89  Wilner,    Wesley     Wright,     Barbara     Zimmerman,    Walden    

Wessel,     Berrenice     89  Wilson,    Ben    Wright,    Betty    Zimmerman,    Wilma    90 

Wessels,   Russell    Wilson,    Betty    Wright,    Howard    Zobel,    Herbert    59 

Wessels,    Velma     Wilson,   Clifford    105,    160,    121        Wright,     Robert     Zobel,    Marie     

West,    Harold    76  Wilson,    Delia    58,    104,    165,    131        Wuebbens,   John    Zubeck,    Robert    156 

West!    Norma     ...  '35       Wulff,    Carolyn     Zubrzycki,    Chester    

West!     Norman     76,  98  Wilson,    Janis    89       Wurth,    Merle     Zuege,   Dick    102,    133 


190 


SINCERE  APPRECIATION... 


COVERS  The  work  of  George  Barford  and  the  Art  Department  for  the  modern 
designs  on  the  cover  and  the  division  pages;  and  the  superior  printing  job 
done  by  Stappenbeck  Bookbindery. 


PHOTOGRAPHY  The  personalized  attention  given  to  class  panels,  campus 
and  other  important  pictures  by  John  J.  Watchinski,  his  wife,  and  other  mem- 
bers of  the  staff  at  Camera  Craft  Studio. 


ENGRAVING  The  many  helpful  and  friendly  suggestions,  and  the  co-opera- 
tion given  me  by  Owen  Marsh,  representative  of  the  Pontiac  Engraving  Com- 
pany,    Chicago,    Illinois,    which    engraved    all    of   the    photographs. 


PRINTING  The  professional  counsel  given  to  me,  and  the  superior  job  done 
by  Edw.  J.  Bryan  and  the  staff  of  the  Pantograph  Printing  and  Stationery 
Company  in   printing  the  yearbook. 


PRODUCTION  The  assistance  of  William  DeClark,  editorial  advisor,  in 
checking  copy  and  in  giving  valuable  journalistic  aid;  Miss  Alta  J.  Day,  business 
advisor,  for  her  friendly  aid  in  answering  all  questions  and  for  sharing  her 
knowledge  of  the  detours  to  be  taken  to  avoid  the  many  stumbling  blocks 
encountered  in  editing  a  yearbook;  and  George  Barford,  art  advisor,  for  his 
expert  advice  and  long  hours  of  assistance  in  all  stages  of  development  of  the 
yearbook. 


CARL  J.  BELL 
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF 


191 


All  that  mankind  has  done,  thought,  gained  or  been  is 
lying  as  in  magic  preservation  in  the  pages  of  books. 

Thomas   Carlyle 


192